Legislature(2019 - 2020)Anch LIO Lg Conf Rm

04/24/2020 10:00 AM House FINANCE

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10:00:39 AM Start
10:03:05 AM Presentation: Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act
12:13:02 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
Teleconference Only - public access via akl.tv
+ Governor's Proposed Revised Programs TELECONFERENCED
Legislative (RPLs) for Coronavirus Aid, Relief,
& Economic Security Act (CARES ACT) by
Neil Steininger, Director, Office of Management
& Budget, Office of the Governor
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                       ANCHORAGE LIO                                                                                            
                      April 24, 2020                                                                                            
                        10:00 a.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:00:39 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
[Note:  meeting  took place  in  the  Anchorage LIO  and  was                                                                   
recorded from Juneau.]                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  called the  House Finance Committee  meeting                                                                   
to order at 10:00 a.m.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Jennifer Johnston, Co-Chair                                                                                      
Representative Dan Ortiz, Vice-Chair (via teleconference)                                                                       
Representative Ben Carpenter (via teleconference)                                                                               
Representative Andy Josephson (via teleconference)                                                                              
Representative Gary Knopp (via teleconference)                                                                                  
Representative Bart LeBon (via teleconference)                                                                                  
Representative Kelly Merrick (via teleconference)                                                                               
Representative Colleen Sullivan-Leonard(via  teleconference)                                                                    
Representative Cathy Tilton (via teleconference)                                                                                
Representative Adam Wool (via teleconference)                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Neil Steininger,  Director, Office of Management  and Budget,                                                                   
Office  of  the Governor;  Alesia  Kruckenberg,  Director  of                                                                   
Planning  and  Budget,  Office  of  Strategy,  Planning,  and                                                                   
Budget, University  of Alaska;  Representative Bryce  Edgmon;                                                                   
Senator Donny Olson; Representative Sharon Jackson.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION:   CORONAVIRUS   AID,   RELIEF,   and   ECONOMIC                                                                   
SECURITY ACT                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  reviewed the  meeting agenda. He  recognized                                                                   
Senator  Donny Olson  in the  audience. He  asked members  to                                                                   
hold their questions until the presentation concluded.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION:   CORONAVIRUS   AID,  RELIEF,   and   ECONOMIC                                                                 
SECURITY ACT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:03:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
NEIL STEININGER,  DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT  AND BUDGET,                                                                   
OFFICE  OF  THE GOVERNOR  (via  teleconference),  shared  his                                                                   
intention to  review the governor's  plan as laid out  in the                                                                   
Revised  Program  Legislative  [RPL] package  the  Office  of                                                                   
Management  and Budget  (OMB)  had submitted  earlier in  the                                                                   
week.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  asked Mr. Steininger where the  document was                                                                   
located online.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  replied  that  the  PowerPoint  presentation                                                                   
should  be  available  on  the   legislature's  website.  The                                                                   
package was also  available on the governor's  website, which                                                                   
listed  all  of the  revised  programs  sent forward  to  the                                                                   
Legislative  Budget and  Audit  (LB&A)  Committee earlier  in                                                                   
the week.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnston  added that  the PowerPoint was  located on                                                                   
the legislature's  website under the House  Finance Committee                                                                   
agenda for the day.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:04:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   began   on  slide   2  of  the   PowerPoint                                                                   
presentation titled  "Office of Management and  Budget: House                                                                   
Finance  Committee:  Coronavirus  Aid, Relief,  and  Economic                                                                   
Security  Act,"  dated April  24,  2020  (copy on  file).  He                                                                   
relayed  that there  was  a  variety of  federal  legislation                                                                   
related   to   the   COVID-19    response   mitigation.   The                                                                   
presentation   focused   primarily   on   items   under   the                                                                   
Coronavirus Aid,  Relief, and Economic Security  (CARES) Act.                                                                   
Additionally,  there were  two  other pieces  of  legislation                                                                   
that  provided   other   areas  of  support   that  did   not                                                                   
necessarily  run through  the  state's  budget, but  provided                                                                   
support out  to communities and  individuals to  address more                                                                   
healthcare  and  medical  related  response  mitigation.  The                                                                   
presentation  would focus  on relief  of some  of the  second                                                                   
order effects and impacts of the COVID-19 outbreak.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger moved  to slide  3  to provide  a high  level                                                                   
summary  of the  CARES Act  funding. The  largest portion  of                                                                   
funding coming  to the  state from the  CARES Act  was coming                                                                   
via the  COVID-19 Relief  Fund (CRF) in  the amount  of $1.25                                                                   
billion.  He  noted   the  $1.25  billion  was   the  minimum                                                                   
allocation  going out  to states.  The  federal Treasury  had                                                                   
issued  additional guidance  on  April 22  regarding how  the                                                                   
funds could  be spent. He  detailed that the  guidance listed                                                                   
six  broad categories  of  expenditures  designed to  address                                                                   
costs  occurring  between  March  1, 2020  and  December  30,                                                                   
2020. He explained  the funds pertained to  expenditures that                                                                   
were  already  being  incurred   and  would  continue  to  be                                                                   
incurred   through   the   duration    of   the   crisis   by                                                                   
municipalities, businesses, and the state government.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  reviewed the six  categories included  in the                                                                   
federal  Treasury  guidance.  The first  was  medical  costs,                                                                   
which  included costs  related  to the  provision of  medical                                                                   
services, expenses  at public hospitals, testing,  and other.                                                                   
The second category  was public health including  the expense                                                                   
of quarantining  individuals,  making public  areas safe  for                                                                   
people, and  other. The third  category was payroll  expenses                                                                   
for some individuals  performing the work needed  to mitigate                                                                   
and  respond  to  the public  health  emergency.  The  fourth                                                                   
category  related  to  compliance with  health  measures.  He                                                                   
detailed  that many of  the public  health measures  released                                                                   
by  the  governor   in  recent  weeks  carried   a  cost  for                                                                   
compliance.  The CARES  Act funding provided  the ability  to                                                                   
cover costs that were incurred  as a result of the mandates.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   detailed  that   the  fifth  category   was                                                                   
economic support  to cover economic  impacts of  the mandates                                                                   
on  small  businesses.   The  sixth  category   pertained  to                                                                   
expenditures  necessary   for  the  function   of  government                                                                   
related to COVID-19.  He reiterated that the  funding covered                                                                   
March 1,  2020 to December 30,  2020. The CARES  Act included                                                                   
other  non-CRS funding  of  approximately  $281 million.  The                                                                   
funding  had gone  to  direct  allocations to  very  specific                                                                   
impacts.   For  example,   it   included   money  coming   to                                                                   
educational  institutions  and   airport  and  transportation                                                                   
infrastructure.   The  CRS  covered   areas  that   were  not                                                                   
specifically  enumerated  elsewhere  in  the  bill  and  gave                                                                   
broad  ability  and  discretion   for  states  and  municipal                                                                   
governments  to  work through  the  impacts of  the  COVID-19                                                                   
crisis.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:09:53 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  turned to a  table showing CARES  Act federal                                                                   
funding  by agency. The  table showed  where CRF  allocations                                                                   
and CARES Act  direct grants fell in the state's  budget. The                                                                   
table included  an RPL column  to show which portions  of the                                                                   
CARES Act  they were associated  with. He explained  that the                                                                   
rows  without  RPL  numbers  reflected  areas  with  adequate                                                                   
authority  in  the  state  budget   to  accept  the  incoming                                                                   
federal  revenues.  He  elaborated  that some  of  the  bills                                                                   
passed during session  had given authority to  the Department                                                                   
of  Health  and   Social  Services  (DHSS)  to   receive  and                                                                   
distribute  money  related  to  impacts  of  the  CARES  Act.                                                                   
Additionally,   there   was   also   authority   within   the                                                                   
Department  of Commerce, Community  and Economic  Development                                                                   
(DCCED)  related to  community development  block grants.  He                                                                   
would address the items individually in later slides.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:11:34 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  moved to  slide 5 showing  an RPL  related to                                                                   
direct  municipal relief.  He  explained that  the CARES  Act                                                                   
allocated  45 percent  of  a state's  CRF  money directly  to                                                                   
municipalities  exceeding 500,000  residents. The  allocation                                                                   
did  not apply  to  Alaska because  it did  not  have a  city                                                                   
exceeding  500,000  residents;  however,  the  administration                                                                   
was  using  the  guidance  to   distribute  45  percent  into                                                                   
municipalities   because  municipalities   and  the   smaller                                                                   
political   subdivisions   were   closer  to   the   response                                                                   
activities. He  elaborated that the municipalities  were able                                                                   
to  understand where  the  money needed  to  be allocated  to                                                                   
ensure the maximum benefit, mitigation, and response.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger shared  that the  administration believed  it                                                                   
was   important   to   ensure   the  money   was   going   to                                                                   
organizations  best fit to  respond to  the crisis.  When the                                                                   
administration  had  looked  at  how to  allocate  the  money                                                                   
fairly  and provide  adequate  resources  to communities,  it                                                                   
had  considered numerous  points of  data to  help guide  its                                                                   
allocation decisions.  The administration had  looked through                                                                   
different  data sets  and things  the state  had in order  to                                                                   
develop a calculation  that quantified the  economic activity                                                                   
and size  and scope  of government  in communities.  They had                                                                   
considered   areas   like   retail,   hospitality,   tourism,                                                                   
regional commercial  fishing, and other measures  of commerce                                                                   
activity in  order to distribute  the money.  The calculation                                                                   
was also based  on population. He detailed  that the existing                                                                   
Community Assistance  Program was successful  in distributing                                                                   
money  based on  population. The  administration had  applied                                                                   
approximately   half   of  the   distribution   through   the                                                                   
Community    Assistance     Program.    Additionally,     the                                                                   
administration  had  used  metrics   within  DCCED  regarding                                                                   
retail, hospitality,  commercial fishing, and  other economic                                                                   
activity and had applied a 75 percent factor.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  reported that the administration  had elected                                                                   
to  do three  quarterly  payments  instead  of one  lump  sum                                                                   
payment.  The  first payment  was  targeted  for May  1.  The                                                                   
payment would  be the population  based metric  combined with                                                                   
one-third  of the economic  activity metric.  The second  and                                                                   
third  payments  would  each be  one-third  of  the  economic                                                                   
activity  metric. He  highlighted  the  calculation shown  on                                                                   
slide  5. He  added that  the  by-community distribution  was                                                                   
available within the RPL package.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:15:42 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  communicated that  the administration  wanted                                                                   
municipalities  to  report  back  monthly on  how  they  were                                                                   
spending the  money. He explained  that the federal  guidance                                                                   
applied to communities  receiving the money -  all recipients                                                                   
had  to ensure  their  expenditures  fit within  the  federal                                                                   
guidance. The  administration wanted communities  to have the                                                                   
discretion to  spend the  money as they  saw fit,  but within                                                                   
the  guidance  from the  federal  government.  He  elaborated                                                                   
that  the  reports  would  go   to  OMB  and  could  be  made                                                                   
available to the legislature and interested parties.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Sullivan-Leonard    considered   the   three                                                                   
quarterly  payments  of  the economic  stimulus  grants.  She                                                                   
asked  if  there   had  been  discussion  about   asking  for                                                                   
quarterly  reports instead  of  monthly reports  in order  to                                                                   
ascertain how communities were using the funds.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that  they had  chosen to  do monthly                                                                   
reporting to get  a quicker idea of how the  funds were being                                                                   
spent by  municipalities and gauge  the effectiveness  of the                                                                   
response activity.  He explained that the  administration was                                                                   
still working to  determine the best reporting  mechanism. He                                                                   
detailed  that every  municipality had  a slightly  different                                                                   
accounting   system  and  way   of  recording   expenditures;                                                                   
therefore, the  administration needed  to ensure  the reports                                                                   
could be provided by all municipalities.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:18:39 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Sullivan-Leonard asked  about the  parameters                                                                   
on how municipalities could spend the money.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  municipalities should  consult                                                                   
the  federal guidance.  He detailed  that the  administration                                                                   
was  also looking  at the  federal guidance  and was  working                                                                   
with its  federal partners to  better understand it  as there                                                                   
were questions  about whether  specific costs fit.  He shared                                                                   
that    municipalities   all    had    questions   and    the                                                                   
administration was  answering as best it could  as quickly as                                                                   
possible. The administration  was available as  a resource to                                                                   
municipalities  as they  tried  to determine  which  category                                                                   
expenditures  fit  under.  He  noted  it was  a  team  effort                                                                   
requiring  everyone  involved  to answer  questions  as  they                                                                   
arose. He  stated the administration  was hoping to  help the                                                                   
municipalities  with  questions  in  order  to  ensure  their                                                                   
spending met federal guidance.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  recognized Representative Sharon  Jackson in                                                                   
the audience.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz looked  at the "Payment  1" calculation  on                                                                   
slide  5:  .25  x  Economic  Activity   Metrics  +  Community                                                                   
Assistance.  He asked for  detail on  what economic  activity                                                                   
metrics  meant  or the  inputs  used  to determine  what  the                                                                   
metrics were all about.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger responded  that  OMB had  looked through  its                                                                   
data that quantified  the amount of economic  activity in any                                                                   
given municipality  as well  as the government's  involvement                                                                   
in the  activity (the  scope and scale  of a local  municipal                                                                   
government).  He  relayed  that DCCED  had  substantial  data                                                                   
activity  in  retail, hospitality,  tourism,  and  commercial                                                                   
fishing.  He explained  there  were metrics  that  quantified                                                                   
all  of the  activities;  therefore,  OMB  had applied  a  75                                                                   
percent  factor to  the  metrics. He  detailed  that the  .25                                                                   
represented  one-third of  the  75 percent.  He clarified  he                                                                   
was  talking about  one-third  of 75  percent  of the  total,                                                                   
which resulted  in .25  instead of .33.  The number  had been                                                                   
applied to the metrics DCCED collected on an annual basis.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:22:13 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz  asked  if   the  department  had  economic                                                                   
activity  data from  all of  the  different communities  that                                                                   
would be receiving the money.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger answered  that when  looking at  the list  of                                                                   
communities  it was  possible  to see  that  some had  values                                                                   
within  the three  other economic  activity metrics  columns.                                                                   
He  stated  they  were somewhat  variable;  however,  it  was                                                                   
representative  of every community  collecting and  providing                                                                   
data to  DCCED that  also used the  economic activities  as a                                                                   
means  to support  their  local municipal  government.  There                                                                   
was an  element of  size of government  within the  community                                                                   
that was  inherent  in the data  used by  OMB. He  elaborated                                                                   
that some municipalities  may have a lower  level involvement                                                                   
in  the community  and the  government  involvement may  come                                                                   
from a  different political  subdivision  that may sit  above                                                                   
the community.  He explained that  they wanted to  ensure the                                                                   
distribution   went  to   the   political  subdivision   most                                                                   
involved in the activity within a community.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz was  concerned  about  having the  accurate                                                                   
information to  make the distribution calculation.  He wanted                                                                   
the distribution  to be as fair  as possible. He  shared that                                                                   
he may have a follow up question about the slide later on.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:24:50 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Johnston   thanked    Mr.   Steininger   for   the                                                                   
presentation,  which she found  very helpful. She  considered                                                                   
the  three  [quarterly  payment]  tranches.  She  appreciated                                                                   
that  OMB was  asking  for monthly  reports  because she  had                                                                   
been reviewing  the federal guidelines  and found them  to be                                                                   
unclear at  times. She remarked  on the importance  of taking                                                                   
caution because  misappropriated funds would have  to be paid                                                                   
back. She asked  if OMB would review the monthly  reports and                                                                   
only  release the  second  tranche after  80  percent of  the                                                                   
funds  from the  first tranche  were spent.  She wondered  if                                                                   
there  was a formula  in terms  of releasing  the second  and                                                                   
third fund tranches.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that the  plan was to  send tranches                                                                   
out  regardless  of  the expenditures  made  from  the  prior                                                                   
tranche. He explained  that the reporting requirement  was to                                                                   
help  the  administration  know  how  the  funds  were  being                                                                   
spent. He  informed the committee  that the April  22 federal                                                                   
guidance  made   it  clear  that  unspent  monies   would  be                                                                   
returned  to the  Treasury.  The administration  intended  to                                                                   
distribute  the  three  tranches  of  money  on  a  quarterly                                                                   
basis. The  administration anticipated that  COVID-19 impacts                                                                   
were significant;  therefore,  it was  not concerned  about a                                                                   
lack of spending  by communities. The concern  was more about                                                                   
ensuring that  funding reached communities in  an expeditious                                                                   
and  reliable  way in  order  to  allow communities  to  plan                                                                   
ahead  and not  make expenditures  without  any certainty  of                                                                   
being reimbursed.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:27:29 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   LeBon   believed   the   economic   activity                                                                   
variable  in the  formula seemed  to be  very subjective.  He                                                                   
pointed out  that the Fairbanks  North Star Borough  had been                                                                   
allocated $450  per person and  was located at the  bottom of                                                                   
the  list  of   the  bigger  communities,  while   Kenai  was                                                                   
allocated  $1,150 per person  and Mat-Su  was allocated  over                                                                   
$600 per person.  He pointed out that the  economic impact of                                                                   
the crisis  was occurring  statewide  and found it  difficult                                                                   
to believe  that Fairbanks was  not worthy of  receiving more                                                                   
support  than $450  per person.  He  had a  problem with  the                                                                   
subjectivity   of   the  economic   activity   variable.   He                                                                   
suggested that  a separate presentation  may be needed  to go                                                                   
into  depth on  the  economic activity  formula.  He did  not                                                                   
know how  it worked  and wanted to  understand it  better. He                                                                   
was  unhappy  about a  $450  per  person allocation  for  the                                                                   
Fairbanks area.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   responded  that   the  cost  of   providing                                                                   
government   services  throughout   the   state  was   highly                                                                   
variable  on a  per  capita basis.  For  example, some  rural                                                                   
areas  were  more  expensive  to  provide  services  to  than                                                                   
others.  The data used  by the  administration accounted  for                                                                   
geographic   variability    and   included    the   political                                                                   
subdivision  involvement in activity  within communities.  He                                                                   
explained it  was the  reason for some  of the disparity  [in                                                                   
funds]   between   communities.   He   explained   that   the                                                                   
administration  had tried to  use a  calculation that  was as                                                                   
objective as possible  with the data available  to the state.                                                                   
There was  some limitation around  the data available  to the                                                                   
state.  The goal  was to  make  a distribution  in order  for                                                                   
communities  to have some  certainty as  soon as possible  in                                                                   
the  amount of  relief coming  their  way in  order to  allow                                                                   
them to  plan mitigation  efforts. The  factors included  the                                                                   
data  available  to  the  state  and  adjusting  for  factors                                                                   
surrounding economic  activity and the size of  government in                                                                   
each community.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:31:36 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  stated that the answer did  not address                                                                   
his  concerns. He  believed the  most impactful  part of  the                                                                   
allocation formula  should be population. He  speculated that                                                                   
if  all  of  the communities   in the  state  were  asked  to                                                                   
address  their economic  impact, there  would be no  question                                                                   
that  all communities  were severely  economically  impacted.                                                                   
He  stated  that  splitting  hairs  on  the  economic  impact                                                                   
portion  of  the formula  was  a  disservice. He  wanted  the                                                                   
formula  to  be  readdressed  with  population  used  as  the                                                                   
dominant  factor.  He  expressed   disbelief  that  Fairbanks                                                                   
would be so  far down on the  list if a true  economic impact                                                                   
analysis were conducted.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool remarked  that it  sounded like  half of                                                                   
the  money allocated  to municipalities  would be  determined                                                                   
by  the  community  assistance  formula and  the  other  half                                                                   
would  be determined  by the  economic  metric. He  explained                                                                   
that  the community  assistance formula  gave different  flat                                                                   
amounts  to  boroughs,  cities,   unorganized  boroughs,  and                                                                   
outside   unorganized   boroughs.   He   was   assuming   the                                                                   
administration's    calculation    followed   the    existing                                                                   
community assistance  formulas. He stated that  the remainder                                                                   
with  the community  assistance  was  divvied  up per  capita                                                                   
throughout the  whole state. Under  the scenario,  the larger                                                                   
areas received more  money because they had  more people, and                                                                   
the  smaller   areas  may   receive  more   based  on   their                                                                   
organizing  entity. He assumed  the administration's  formula                                                                   
was  similar. He  stated  his  understanding  that the  other                                                                   
half of  the money  would be divided  into three  payments of                                                                   
25  percent  each.   He  wondered  about  the   remaining  25                                                                   
percent.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool asked  if there  was a  formula for  the                                                                   
economic  metrics like  there was  for community  assistance.                                                                   
If  so, he  asked  if the  administration  could provide  the                                                                   
formula.  He   asked  if  unorganized  areas   also  received                                                                   
economic metrics.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   confirmed  that   the  existing   community                                                                   
assistance   program   formula   had   been   used   in   the                                                                   
administration's formula.  He noted that the  only difference                                                                   
was  that  the  funding  level   was  much  higher  than  was                                                                   
typically  distributed by the  community assistance  program.                                                                   
The portion beyond  the community assistance base  amount was                                                                   
primarily  based on  population.  He explained  that  roughly                                                                   
half  of the  CRF distribution  was based  on population.  He                                                                   
shared that  OMB could individually  walk people  through the                                                                   
DCCED  economic  activity  data  to  help  committee  members                                                                   
understand  it better.  He furthered  that  it was  objective                                                                   
data collected  from any  political subdivision  providing it                                                                   
to  DCCED.  He  elaborated  that  any  place  where  economic                                                                   
activity metrics  impact a municipality's ability  to provide                                                                   
government  services  to  its  population  was  collected  by                                                                   
DCCED. The  data touched on most  but not all of  the state's                                                                   
communities,   which   was   the    reason   the   population                                                                   
distribution  for the  other  half [of  the  funding] was  so                                                                   
important.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  addressed  Representative   Wool's  question                                                                   
about  the  three  payments  of  .25 not  adding  up  to  100                                                                   
percent.  He   explained  that   OMB  tried  to   divide  the                                                                   
allocation  of  funds  in half  by  population  and  economic                                                                   
activity.  He elaborated  that  75  percent of  the  absolute                                                                   
value  of the  metrics  equaled  about half  of  the CRF.  He                                                                   
detailed  that  it  resulted  in  a  fairly  even  split  and                                                                   
weighting  between population  and  economic activity  (based                                                                   
on some level of political subdivision size).                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:37:36 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  estimated   that  if  .25  of  economic                                                                   
activity  equaled roughly  half  of the  $560 million  grant,                                                                   
approximately $280  million would go out under  the community                                                                   
assistance  formula.  He  asked   if  all  of  the  political                                                                   
organized  entities would  receive an  amount equal  to their                                                                   
per  capita.  For  example,  he   believed  areas  inside  an                                                                   
unorganized borough  received 1/19th  of the amount  received                                                                   
by a  full borough and areas  outside an unorganized  borough                                                                   
received  1/12th of the  amount. He  believed Mr.  Steininger                                                                   
had  stated  that a  community  would  not get  the  economic                                                                   
activity  portion if they  did not  submit economic  activity                                                                   
information.  He asked  if the  communities  would receive  a                                                                   
per  capita  portion,  similar to  the  community  assistance                                                                   
formula.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  answered  in the  affirmative.  He  detailed                                                                   
that  any political  subdivision that  was part  of the  most                                                                   
recent  community assistance  program  distribution was  also                                                                   
part of  the distribution  [shown on  slide 5]. He  clarified                                                                   
that the  75 percent  was roughly  half of the  distribution.                                                                   
He explained  that $305 million  of the $562.5  million would                                                                   
go  out  based  on the  economic  activity  metrics  and  the                                                                   
remaining  $257.5   million  would   go  out  based   on  the                                                                   
community  assistance  formula.  He  reiterated  his  earlier                                                                   
explanation  that 75  percent of  the absolute  value of  the                                                                   
metrics equaled roughly half or $305 million.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  would  be   interested  in  seeing  the                                                                   
economic formula calculations used by the administration.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:40:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz  asked  why  Juneau would  qualify  for  10                                                                   
times more than  Fairbanks under the inputs  and formula used                                                                   
by OMB.  He asked why North  Slope would receive  nothing. He                                                                   
asked if  the methodology  used to  create the formula  could                                                                   
be shared with committee members.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that the administration  was working                                                                   
on a  distribution that  would be  as objective as  possible.                                                                   
He noted  that with the  information available to  the state,                                                                   
nothing  would  be perfect.  He  stated  that the  amount  of                                                                   
effort it would  take to get a perfect distribution  would be                                                                   
arduous  and  would slow  the  down  the state's  ability  to                                                                   
respond and  ability to  get money  into the communities.  He                                                                   
agreed that  the economic  metrics were  not equal  for every                                                                   
community,  which   made  it   important  to  layer   in  the                                                                   
population   metric.   He   explained   that  much   of   the                                                                   
variability was based  on data the state had  and the ability                                                                   
to  have an  objective metric  and not  picking and  choosing                                                                   
subjectively.  He offered to  walk committee members  through                                                                   
the calculation for their communities individually.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:42:22 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Knopp  looked at slide  4 and remarked  it was                                                                   
evident   there   were   concerns    about   the   allocation                                                                   
methodology.  He  appreciated  the information  provided.  He                                                                   
was  happy  to   see  the  administration  would   issue  the                                                                   
payments  in  quarterly  distributions  and  require  monthly                                                                   
reporting by  communities. He  had heard from  some municipal                                                                   
managers  that the federal  guidance limiting  how the  funds                                                                   
could  be used  meant there  was no  way most  municipalities                                                                   
would be  able to expend  the funds  and the money  would end                                                                   
up going  back to  the federal  government.  He asked  if, as                                                                   
information came  in along the way showing  which communities                                                                   
were  able  to  spend  the  funds,   the  funding  allocation                                                                   
formula could be  adjusted based on need. He stated  it was a                                                                   
strictly COVID  related issue  and every community  responded                                                                   
differently.  For example,  if  Fairbanks spent  more of  the                                                                   
funding  than  Kenai,  he wondered  whether  funds  could  be                                                                   
reallocated in the second and third payments.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Knopp  asked if all of the funds  could not be                                                                   
spent  on  COVID  related  costs  whether  funding  could  be                                                                   
reallocated  to the Small  Business Relief  Fund because  the                                                                   
state had  fallen short  in support  of small businesses.  He                                                                   
elaborated that  the payroll protection  plan had done  a lot                                                                   
to support employees  and keep them on the  payroll; however,                                                                   
it had done  little for business owners who  had used savings                                                                   
or loans  to keep  employees on  the payroll. He  highlighted                                                                   
that the  plan had  not accounted for  any lost  revenues for                                                                   
small  businesses. Likewise,  the  COVID  relief funding  did                                                                   
not account for lost revenue in municipalities.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Knopp  believed  the  legislature  needed  to                                                                   
advocate for  on behalf of  businesses. He stated  that Kenai                                                                   
was  heavily  dependent  on  tourism   and  he  believed  the                                                                   
community  would take  a severe  hit in lost  revenue  in the                                                                   
next one  to two years. He  observed that revenue  makeup was                                                                   
prohibited  in the  guidance  issued  from the  Treasury.  He                                                                   
noted that  the crisis  had shut  the state  down on  March 1                                                                   
and support  funding had not  come until mid-April;  however,                                                                   
none of  the funding  was retroactive.  He stressed  that all                                                                   
of the  businesses that  had kept employees  on and  had lost                                                                   
revenue  had not  been helped.  He  asked if  funds could  be                                                                   
used  where they  were  needed  instead of  returning  unused                                                                   
funding to the federal government.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:46:04 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger confirmed  that  making up  lost revenue  was                                                                   
explicitly   prohibited   in   the  Treasury   guidance.   He                                                                   
clarified  that the CARES  Act specified  that the  money was                                                                   
meant to reimburse  expenditures from March 1  going forward.                                                                   
He explained  that businesses would  have the ability  to put                                                                   
CARES funding  towards expenses  incurred beginning  March 1.                                                                   
He relayed  that the  way the  RPLs had  been laid  out would                                                                   
not   allow    redistribution   of   funds;    however,   the                                                                   
administration   believed  the   money  allocated   to  small                                                                   
business  relief  was  a  good  amount  based  on  the  total                                                                   
resources available  and the other  programs that  existed to                                                                   
help small businesses.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  addressed  Representative  Knopp's  idea  of                                                                   
reallocating within  the municipal relief program.  He stated                                                                   
that  everything  was  a moving  target  going  forward.  The                                                                   
administration had  provided the RPL project on  the 21st [of                                                                   
April]  and it  had  received  additional guidance  from  the                                                                   
federal government  on how  the funds could  be spent  on the                                                                   
22nd  [of April].  He relayed  there would  be more  guidance                                                                   
coming  at   later  dates  as   the  Treasury   responded  to                                                                   
questions.  He noted that  the Treasury  may make  changes to                                                                   
how  the money  could be  used  and there  may be  subsequent                                                                   
legislation  from  the  federal  government.  He  highlighted                                                                   
that  the  quarterly  payments gave  the  administration  the                                                                   
ability  be responsive  if  the federal  government  provided                                                                   
new  information that  changed  the nature  of  the money  or                                                                   
response.  He  stated  that  the   administration's  response                                                                   
needed  to be  flexible because  there would  be new  federal                                                                   
guidance and changes in the way money came to the state.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:48:48 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  turned  to  slide 6  related  to  the  Small                                                                   
Business Relief  plan. The administration had  allocated $300                                                                   
million out of  the CRF funding to small business  relief. He                                                                   
reiterated his  earlier statement  that OMB had  released the                                                                   
package  on April  21  and  additional federal  guidance  had                                                                   
come out  on the 22, which  had slightly changed the  way the                                                                   
administration   had  envisioned   spending  the   money.  He                                                                   
explained that the  RPL addressed the concept  of loan relief                                                                   
for  some  of the  small  businesses;  however,  the  federal                                                                   
guidance  was much  more  tailored  towards grants  to  small                                                                   
businesses. The  administration was  looking at  working with                                                                   
the various  state agencies like  the Alaska  Housing Finance                                                                   
Corporation  (AHFC),  the  DCCED   Investments  Section,  the                                                                   
Alaska Industrial  Development and Export  Authority (AIDEA),                                                                   
and  other   various  agencies   with  access  to   different                                                                   
industries  within the  state. The  idea was  to look  at the                                                                   
business community  and distribute  funds to businesses  that                                                                   
did not have the  option or were not good fits  for the other                                                                   
existing  programs  like the  Small  Business  Administration                                                                   
Loans or the Payroll Protection Act.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger explained  that  the state  had  to work  the                                                                   
Small Business  Relief program  within the federal  guidance.                                                                   
He detailed  that the program was  a bit more flexible  - the                                                                   
administration needed  to respond to the guidance  and ensure                                                                   
the money was  allocated to the right sectors  and businesses                                                                   
most in  need of relief.  The $300 million  was set  aside to                                                                   
provide  relief   to  businesses,  but  without   a  specific                                                                   
allocation. The  plan was more  open ended and  would require                                                                   
the state to  work with the business community  and different                                                                   
partners  to ensure the  funds reached  the right  businesses                                                                   
in the right way.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
10:51:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston  asked if  the  RPL was  still  a work  in                                                                   
progress.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger answered  in  the affirmative.  He  explained                                                                   
there  was room  for  flexibility  as to  how  the money  was                                                                   
spent, but  the administration  knew a significant  amount of                                                                   
money was needed for small business relief.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Johnston   understood   the  problems   with   the                                                                   
[federal] guidance  and how it  came out April 22  [after the                                                                   
RPL   was  submitted].   She   stated   that  currently   the                                                                   
administration  had   the  funds  going  through   the  DCCED                                                                   
investment section.  She did not recall DCCED  receiving pass                                                                   
through funds  to AIDEA  and AHFC in  the past.  She believed                                                                   
the  entities tended  to  receive their  own  appropriations.                                                                   
She  looked  forward  to  more   information  about  how  the                                                                   
administration developed the RPL going forward.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  noted that the presentation  identified                                                                   
AHFC,  AIDEA,  and  the  DCCED  Investments  Section  as  the                                                                   
recipients of  the funding  (on slide 6).  He asked  if there                                                                   
would be a program  to allow the banking community  to have a                                                                   
say in how the monies were allocated to businesses.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that it  was a great  suggestion. He                                                                   
explained  that the  [small business  relief]  plan was  more                                                                   
fluid  than  the specific  allocation  and  municipal  relief                                                                   
portion.  The federal  guidance  received on  [April] 22  did                                                                   
not allow loans,  but it did not preclude  the administration                                                                   
from  working  with  the  banking   community  to  understand                                                                   
impacts to businesses throughout the state.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon suggested  addressing the  size  of the                                                                   
various  banks  if OMB  intended  to  work with  the  banking                                                                   
community.  He advised  against  a first  come, first  served                                                                   
basis. He  recommended a pro  rata approach to  prevent small                                                                   
banks from being squeezed out by larger ones.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  wondered   how  businesses  would  know                                                                   
which  state entity  (i.e. AHFC,  AIDEA,  DCCED) to  approach                                                                   
for funding. He  asked if each of the entities  would receive                                                                   
$100  million of  the $300  million total.  He remarked  that                                                                   
businesses often  went to a bank they currently  did business                                                                   
with. He  commented that Mr.  Steininger had stated  that the                                                                   
funds  would be  grants, not  loans. He  asked if  businesses                                                                   
would apply for grants with all of the entities.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:55:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered  the administration would  need to do                                                                   
more outreach  prior to distribution  of the money  to ensure                                                                   
that  all  impacted  businesses  knew  where to  go  to  gain                                                                   
access to  relief if they were  not eligible for  things like                                                                   
the  Small Business  Administration loans  and other  federal                                                                   
CARES Act  funding. He  reiterated that  outreach would  need                                                                   
to take place prior to distribution of the funds.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson asked  if the administration  would                                                                   
be  using  its  economic  stabilization  team  that  included                                                                   
former Governor  Sean Parnell and former Senator  Mark Begich                                                                   
on the small business relief component of the package.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger replied  that  the administration  was  using                                                                   
every resource available  in the state to guide  each aspect.                                                                   
He elaborated  that there was no  reason not to tap  into any                                                                   
resource with expertise in each area of the response.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz  asked if  Mr.  Steininger  was saying  the                                                                   
economic team had  given input or whether  the administration                                                                   
was not opposed to seeking the input in the future.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  answered that  the  guidance  that came  out                                                                   
after the  RPL was  put forward changed  how the  state would                                                                   
go  forward with  the  small  business relief.  He  explained                                                                   
that the  administration  needed to make  adjustments  to fit                                                                   
with the revised  federal guidance. The  administration would                                                                   
work with  any available resources,  which could  include the                                                                   
economic stabilization team.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked  for verification  that the  economic                                                                   
stabilization team  had not yet  provided input on  the small                                                                   
business relief portion of the plan.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that the  business relief  portion of                                                                   
the  plan  had  shifted  since its  release  because  of  the                                                                   
change in federal  guidance. Beyond the goal  of ensuring the                                                                   
grants reached  businesses most  in need, the  administration                                                                   
did not yet have  a specific plan that would  have had input.                                                                   
The administration  was currently  working to respond  to the                                                                   
change in federal guidance.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:59:08 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  recognized  that  Representative  Carpenter                                                                   
had joined the meeting.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool   considered  that  the   funding  under                                                                   
discussion  [shown  on  slide   6]  was  for  small  business                                                                   
relief.  He surmised the  funding was  for existing  entities                                                                   
needing relief.  He assumed  the grant  funding would  not be                                                                   
available for  a future business  proposal to make  masks. He                                                                   
asked  if  the  [economic development]  team  headed  by  Bob                                                                   
Penney under DCCED was involved in the plan development.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger confirmed  that the  funds were  not for  new                                                                   
businesses.  He  stated  that  the  funds  were  to  mitigate                                                                   
impacts  to existing  businesses suffering  due to  COVID-19.                                                                   
He elaborated  that if someone  were looking to start  a mask                                                                   
making business,  it would  not necessarily  qualify  for the                                                                   
small  business  relief  funding; however,  there  was  other                                                                   
money in  the CARES  Act funding for  the purchase  of masks.                                                                   
He  considered  that  there  may   be  opportunities  for  an                                                                   
enterprising  individual to  start a  business producing  and                                                                   
selling  masks; however,  the  small business  funding  would                                                                   
not be  direct support  for the  business. He explained  that                                                                   
the funding  was intended  for existing  businesses  that had                                                                   
been required  to shut down due  to health mandates,  such as                                                                   
restaurants and hairdressers.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered  an earlier question about  where the                                                                   
incoming  funding went  within DCCED.  He explained  that the                                                                   
funding  had  been centralized  within  DCCED  because  there                                                                   
were  multiple  entities  throughout   the  state  government                                                                   
(i.e. AIDEA,  AHFC, the DCCED  Investments Section)  that had                                                                   
relationships with  the business  community. The idea  was to                                                                   
centralize  the funds within  DCCED for  distribution  to the                                                                   
different agencies as the need arose.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:02:06 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  turned  to  slide   7  related  to  economic                                                                   
stimulus for Alaska  fisheries. He detailed that  the funding                                                                   
was not a  portion of the CRF;  it was a direct  grant within                                                                   
the CARES  Act related to  fisheries relief for  subsistence,                                                                   
charter  fisheries,  and commercial  fisheries  participants.                                                                   
The  administration  estimated  Alaska  would  receive  about                                                                   
$100  million  of   the  $300  million  national   total.  He                                                                   
explained  that the estimate  was based  on Alaska  fisheries                                                                   
accounting  for about  two-thirds  of the  tonnage value  and                                                                   
one-third  of the  value of  fish catchment  in the  country.                                                                   
The administration  was  looking to have  the state  involved                                                                   
in the  distribution of  the funding to  ensure it  went into                                                                   
the   correct  fisheries.   The   total  the   administration                                                                   
expected to receive  was about one-third of  the $300 million                                                                   
national distribution.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnston  asked for verification that  the [economic                                                                   
stimulus  for   Alaska  fisheries]   funding  was   still  in                                                                   
negotiation with the National Marine Fisheries Service.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered in the affirmative.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston  asked  if  the CARES  Act  clarified  the                                                                   
funds  were  supposed to  go  to  the discretion  of  states.                                                                   
Alternatively, she  asked if the amount people  would receive                                                                   
was  still   under  negotiation  with  the   National  Marine                                                                   
Fisheries Service.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  agreed  that the  administration  was  still                                                                   
working  through   who  was  responsible.  He   relayed  that                                                                   
fisheries  managers had  reached out  and were interested  in                                                                   
seeing the  money routed through  the state for  distribution                                                                   
to  ensure  the   funds  would  go  to  the   fisheries  most                                                                   
impacted.  He  explained  that  whether the  money  would  be                                                                   
routed  to  the  state  was still  under  discussion  at  the                                                                   
federal  level.  The  RPL  would ensure  the  state  had  the                                                                   
ability  to collect  and distribute  the funds  if the  funds                                                                   
were routed through the state.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson asked if  the monies could  be used                                                                   
for  a community  like  King Salmon  or  Naknek to  set up  a                                                                   
temporary  hospital  or to  contract  with  ANPs or  PAs  for                                                                   
screening  incoming fisheries  workers.  He  used a  scenario                                                                   
where screening  was done  well, the  quarantine worked,  and                                                                   
the  state  supported a  regular  fishery.  He noted  that  a                                                                   
further assumption  was the presence of someone  on the other                                                                   
side of  the Pacific Ocean who  was prepared to  buy Alaska's                                                                   
product.  He considered  the  possibility  of  a full  season                                                                   
that  would  result  in a  productive  financial  season.  He                                                                   
asked if  the economic  stimulus funds  for Alaska  fisheries                                                                   
could  be  used  on  costs  associated   with  screening  and                                                                   
treatment.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:06:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered  that public health expenses  such as                                                                   
setting  up quarantine  and  testing  sites fit  more  within                                                                   
municipal  distributions out  of the  CRF. He explained  that                                                                   
the  fisheries  money  appeared  to  be  intended  as  direct                                                                   
relief  to  individual  fishermen.  He  elaborated  that  the                                                                   
expenses  highlighted   by  Representative   Josephson  would                                                                   
better  fit  under  the  activity   directed  through  public                                                                   
health or municipal relief funds.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson remarked that  it was  difficult to                                                                   
separate the things  at some point. He stressed  that workers                                                                   
could  not work if  they were  not safe.  He understood  that                                                                   
the administration did not write the rules.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:07:36 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  referenced the $100 million  Mr. Steininger                                                                   
had described  that would be  going to various  entities most                                                                   
impacted.  He asked  if the  statement  referred to  economic                                                                   
impacts of the  virus in terms of market for  the product. He                                                                   
asked for  more detail on how  the funds could be  used based                                                                   
on the impacts of COVID.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger replied  that he  did not  want to  speculate                                                                   
about exactly  what type of  impact to an individual  fishery                                                                   
would   be  covered   by   the   funds.  He   explained   his                                                                   
understanding  that the  funds were designed  to be  released                                                                   
directly to  individual fishermen  involved in a  subsistence                                                                   
charter or  commercial fishery.  He furthered that  the types                                                                   
of  things  mentioned  by  Representative  Josephson  in  his                                                                   
previous  question would  not  be 100  percent successful  in                                                                   
ensuring  every fishery  could occur and  that every  fishery                                                                   
had  a market.  He  believed  there  would be  many  impacted                                                                   
fisheries  and   the  money  was   intended  to   help  those                                                                   
individuals.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon  asked if  the  intent  of the  funding                                                                   
(highlighted on slide  7) was to benefit Alaska  fisheries as                                                                   
opposed  to  fishery  operations  from  out  of  state  (e.g.                                                                   
Seattle, WA) working in Alaska waters.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger answered  that the  intent was  to work  with                                                                   
Alaska fisheries  comprised of  Alaskan men and  women making                                                                   
a  livelihood through  commercial,  charter, and  subsistence                                                                   
fishing.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon replied that he was glad to hear it.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
11:10:47 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  moved  to  slide 8  and  detailed  that  the                                                                   
funding  was a  distribution from  the $1.25  billion CRF  in                                                                   
the amount of  $337.5 million. He detailed that  a portion of                                                                   
the  funding was  intended for  health related  costs in  the                                                                   
Department  of  Health  and  Social  Services  (DHSS)  and  a                                                                   
portion  would  be contingency  funding  because  there  were                                                                   
myriad unknowns  about  where the virus  would progress  into                                                                   
the future.  The contingency funding  would be  available for                                                                   
future  health  costs  and  costs   incurred  by  DHSS  while                                                                   
responding to  the virus. The  funding would also be  used to                                                                   
backfill  some of  the  expenditures  paid for  with  general                                                                   
funds  in advance  of  federal  relief packages.  He  relayed                                                                   
there was not  an RPL required for the funding  because there                                                                   
was existing  authority  within the DHSS  Division of  Public                                                                   
Health  to collect  any federal  receipts  related to  health                                                                   
response from the federal government.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson stated  that  at the  end of  March                                                                   
the legislature  had appropriated $87.7 million  toward COVID                                                                   
relief.  He noted  that a  portion  had been  vetoed and  the                                                                   
actual  appropriation was  $75  million. He  wondered if  the                                                                   
department   would  use   the   federal   funding  or   state                                                                   
appropriation  first. He  asked  if the  state funding  would                                                                   
lapse if it was not needed after federal funds were used.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   answered  that   federal  funds   would  be                                                                   
utilized  before state  funds where  possible. The  preferred                                                                   
option  was  to  use federal  revenues  where  available.  He                                                                   
elaborated that  the [state] general  funds would  enable the                                                                   
state to  meet the  needs for  items that  did not  fit under                                                                   
the  federal  funding  guidance. He  confirmed  that  unspent                                                                   
state funds would  lapse back into the General  Fund when the                                                                   
appropriation expired.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  turned to  slide  9  showing a  $50  million                                                                   
allocation  to  human  services   nonprofits  including  soup                                                                   
kitchens,   food  banks,   homeless   shelters,  and   groups                                                                   
providing  clothing to  individuals  who  were displaced  and                                                                   
impacted  due to  COVID. The  funding was  allocated to  DHSS                                                                   
and utilized  the existing  federal receipt authority  within                                                                   
the Division  of Public  Health.  The intent  was to run  the                                                                   
funding through  the existing community initiative  and human                                                                   
services  matching   grant  program.   He  remarked   on  the                                                                   
numerous   organizations  providing   support  for   homeless                                                                   
populations displaced  due to  COVID and individuals  who may                                                                   
have  lost their  jobs. The  funding was  intended to  ensure                                                                   
the nonprofit community  had access to resources  to continue                                                                   
providing support.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:15:03 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon asked  for verification  that city  and                                                                   
borough  governments would  have  a role  in determining  how                                                                   
the funds were distributed.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  the intent  was for  the funds                                                                   
to go  directly to  nonprofits from  DHSS. The federal  funds                                                                   
would bolster the  existing program to provide  grants to all                                                                   
of the [human  services] nonprofits. The funds  would not run                                                                   
through municipalities.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon asked  if  the state  would decide  how                                                                   
the distributions would be made.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered in the affirmative.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  asked  if  nonprofits  receiving  funds                                                                   
would  be   subject  to   any  reporting  requirements   like                                                                   
municipalities were.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  he was  not familiar  with the                                                                   
reporting requirements  under the existing state  program. He                                                                   
relayed that like  municipalities, the nonprofits  would need                                                                   
to  spend  the  money  on  eligible  expenditures  under  the                                                                   
federal  guidance.   The  idea  was  to  target   funding  to                                                                   
existing nonprofits  that were  doing work related  to COVID.                                                                   
He elaborated  that all homeless  shelters and  soup kitchens                                                                   
throughout the  state had to  respond dramatically  to ensure                                                                   
health  mandates   were  followed  (e.g.   social  distancing                                                                   
rules),  which  had  resulted  in  a  substantial  cost.  The                                                                   
administration did  not believe there would be  trouble tying                                                                   
costs within  the organizations  to COVID. He  believed there                                                                   
would be  much of  an issue  tying the  costs to the  federal                                                                   
guidance because  it was clearly  laid out that  the expenses                                                                   
were allowable.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:17:25 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger highlighted  a $5 million CARES  Act grant for                                                                   
child  nutrition  within  the  Department  of  Education  and                                                                   
Early Development  (DEED) on slide 10. He  explained that the                                                                   
funding was intended for meals to students.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked how  the $5  million amount  had been                                                                   
determined.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  answered  that $5  million  represented  the                                                                   
amount  allocated   to  Alaska  through  the   CARES  Act  as                                                                   
determined by the federal government.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:18:41 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger reviewed  CARES Act  funding for  development                                                                   
block  grants  at a  total  of  $2.8  million via  DCCED.  He                                                                   
elaborated that  there was existing federal  authority within                                                                   
prior DCCED  appropriations for  community development  block                                                                   
grants.  The excess federal  authority  would be utilized  to                                                                   
collect the funds for distribution to communities.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool asked  what portion  of the funding  for                                                                   
block grants had been vetoed.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that he  did not have the  number off                                                                   
the top of his head.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  wondered   if  the  CARES  Act  funding                                                                   
reflected a backfill of the vetoed funds.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered  that the $2.8 million  represented a                                                                   
direct allocation  to Alaska from the federal  government via                                                                   
the CARES Act.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Steininger   addressed   $48  million   for   emergency                                                                   
education  relief  funds  allocated   to  DEED.  The  funding                                                                   
represented the  amount directly  allocated to Alaska  in the                                                                   
CARES Act.  He elaborated that  $38.4 million of  the funding                                                                   
was  for  education  stabilization.  He  explained  that  the                                                                   
grants  were  distributed  to  local  education  agencies  or                                                                   
school districts  through the Title I formula.  Additionally,                                                                   
there   was  $6.5   million  in   the  governor's   Emergency                                                                   
Education Relief  Fund. He expounded  that the fund  had been                                                                   
established in  the CARES Act  to allow states  discretion in                                                                   
providing  grants to  school  districts  and other  education                                                                   
agencies  on  needs  and  impacts  of  COVID.  There  was  an                                                                   
opportunity  for Alaska  to receive  slightly  more than  the                                                                   
known  allocation; therefore  the  $48  million requested  in                                                                   
the RPL had been rounded up slightly.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:21:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked if  the entire  $48 million  would be                                                                   
distributed  through the formula  program. Alternatively,  he                                                                   
wondered  if the  amount to  be distributed  via the  formula                                                                   
program was  limited to the $38.4  million. He asked  how the                                                                   
$6.5 million would be distributed to schools.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  answered  that   90  percent  of  the  $38.4                                                                   
million was  required to be  distributed through the  Title I                                                                   
allocation. He noted  that DEED could provide  a list showing                                                                   
how much each  school district received. He  relayed that the                                                                   
$6.5 million  could be distributed  at the discretion  of the                                                                   
department   to  aid   the  most   impacted  districts.   The                                                                   
department  had identified  where approximately  half  of the                                                                   
funds would  go and  the information was  included on  a list                                                                   
DEED could  provide. The  remaining 10  percent of  the $38.4                                                                   
million  could   be  used  for  other  COVID   related  costs                                                                   
incurred by  the department, such  as helping  districts with                                                                   
distance  learning.   The  funding   would  allow   for  some                                                                   
resources to  be available  at the state  level to  assist in                                                                   
some  of  the  programs  and  with  other  impacts  that  may                                                                   
benefit from  state coordination.  The remaining half  of the                                                                   
$6.5  million would  be held  in reserve  for districts  that                                                                   
may see larger impacts.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  referenced the  remaining half of  the $6.5                                                                   
million and asked  if it would be up to  individual districts                                                                   
to make  the case  that they  had been  the most impacted  by                                                                   
COVID to qualify for the funds.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that the  governor and DEED  had the                                                                   
discretion to determine  how the funds would  be distributed.                                                                   
He believed  they were working  to establish the best  way to                                                                   
distribute  the  money  and determine  which  districts  were                                                                   
most impacted.  He recognized  that all districts  were being                                                                   
impacted  by COVID.  The  funds were  being  held in  reserve                                                                   
because,  similar to  the reserve  held in  DHSS, there  were                                                                   
many unknowns about how the impacts would carry forward.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
11:24:41 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  asked about the $562.5  million for                                                                   
local  governments.  He  asked  if it  had  been  within  the                                                                   
administration's  authority to  give monies  directly to  the                                                                   
54 school districts.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   answered  that   the  CARES  Act   guidance                                                                   
specified  that the $562.5  million (42  percent of  the CRF)                                                                   
should    be    distributed    to    municipalities/political                                                                   
subdivisions   that  the   state  had   distributed  to.   He                                                                   
elaborated   that  if   there   was  a   district  within   a                                                                   
subdivision that  had seen impacts related to  COVID that may                                                                   
not be  covered under  the $38  million distribution,  it was                                                                   
in  a municipality's  discretion  to allocate  the funds.  He                                                                   
explained that  the method  provided municipalities  with the                                                                   
most discretion.  For example, if the biggest  and most clear                                                                   
need  within  a  community  was helping  out  a  school,  the                                                                   
municipality  had the ability  to do  so. The  administration                                                                   
did  not want  to tie  the hands  of  the municipalities  and                                                                   
would give them  the discretion available within  the federal                                                                   
guidance.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  remarked   that  he  had  his  own                                                                   
concerns  about adding  an additional  $2.5  trillion in  the                                                                   
federal   deficit  for   great  grandchildren   to  pay.   He                                                                   
discussed that  a number of  states were making  the argument                                                                   
that  Congress had  failed to  bail  them out  and there  had                                                                   
been an "odd"  discussion about bankruptcy. For  example, New                                                                   
York had  a $15 billion deficit.  He noted that Alaska  was a                                                                   
horrible  candidate for  bankruptcy for  obvious reasons.  He                                                                   
asked if  the administration  planned to  join in  the outcry                                                                   
for  funds  that  were  not  necessarily  COVID  related.  He                                                                   
pointed  out  that  the  oil   recession  was  impacting  the                                                                   
state's  bottom  line  significantly,   which  was  "sort  of                                                                   
directly" related  to COVID. He  asked if the  administration                                                                   
would be  joining governors like  [New York]  Governor Andrew                                                                   
Cuomo asking for additional funding in direct aid.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:28:07 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger could  not speculate on future  intentions for                                                                   
joining  in  any  of  those  sorts  of  petitions.  The  more                                                                   
flexible  the funding  was,  the more  it  would help  Alaska                                                                   
recover  from   the  first  and   second  order   impacts  of                                                                   
COVID-19.  The   state  had  to   work  within   the  federal                                                                   
guidelines,  which did  not allow  for the  backfill of  lost                                                                   
revenues or things of that nature.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  highlighted  a $5 million  allocation  to the                                                                   
Higher  Education  Emergency Relief  Fund  on  slide 13.  The                                                                   
funding had  been set up in  the CARES Act to  provide relief                                                                   
to higher  education  institutions. He  elaborated that  $7.9                                                                   
million  would go  to  the University  of  Alaska system.  He                                                                   
explained  that  the  University  system  had  some  existing                                                                   
federal authority  it would use  to collect a portion  of the                                                                   
funding. The  RPL was  only $5  million because it  accounted                                                                   
for  the difference  of  the  shortfall in  the  University's                                                                   
federal  receipt  authority.  Half  of  the  amount  was  for                                                                   
grants  directly to  students  and the  other  half could  be                                                                   
used at the University's discretion.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool asked if  the $5  million was  a federal                                                                   
determination   or  a  state   request.  He  referenced   Mr.                                                                   
Steininger's statement  that that the University  had federal                                                                   
authority to  cover part of the  grant. He observed  that the                                                                   
relief  fund  was  $5  million,   and  the  University  would                                                                   
receive  $7.9 million in  other grant  monies. He  considered                                                                   
the  grants that  would  go directly  to  students. He  noted                                                                   
that  students  were  being  sent  home.  He  asked  how  the                                                                   
student  requirements were  determined.  He highlighted  that                                                                   
the  University  had said  at  one  point that  impacts  from                                                                   
COVID could cost  the system $20 million. He  wondered if the                                                                   
administration   was  looking   to  address   some  of   that                                                                   
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
11:31:06 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger answered  that the $7.9 million  allocation to                                                                   
the   University  had   been   determined   by  the   federal                                                                   
government.  The  $5 million  was  the additional  amount  in                                                                   
receipt  authority needed  by the  University. He  elaborated                                                                   
that  the University  already  had excess  or hollow  federal                                                                   
authority  within  its  budget allowing  the  institution  to                                                                   
make up  about $3  million, which  was the  reason they  only                                                                   
needed  an  additional  $5 million.  He  clarified  that  the                                                                   
University  would   receive  $7.9  million  total   from  the                                                                   
federal government  to cover some  of the impacts  related to                                                                   
COVID. He  addressed Representative  Wool's question  related                                                                   
to  money that  would go  directly to  students. He  detailed                                                                   
that the  allocation had  been specifically  laid out  in the                                                                   
CARES  Act and the  state did  not have  discretion over  how                                                                   
the funds were used.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool asked if  there were  any plans  for the                                                                   
administration  to  [note:  a  portion  of  the  question  is                                                                   
inaudible  due to  an interruption  in the  audio]...directed                                                                   
to  the  University  due to  impacts  resulting  from  COVID,                                                                   
including  declining   enrollment.  He  reasoned   that  some                                                                   
students may not  want to do distance-only  courses. He asked                                                                   
if  the  University  would  receive  any  additional  federal                                                                   
COVID funding.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston asked  members to mute  their phones.  She                                                                   
asked if Mr. Steininger had heard the question.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  restated his understanding  of Representative                                                                   
Wool's question.  He understood  the  question to be  whether                                                                   
there was a  plan to address continued future  impacts to the                                                                   
University  system as a  result of  COVID and decisions  made                                                                   
by students  to do  on-campus versus  remote learning  in the                                                                   
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool agreed. He  noted that like  the fishing                                                                   
and hospitality  industries, the University was  affected. He                                                                   
highlighted  the  $7.9 million  in  federal grants,  half  of                                                                   
which  would go  to students,  leaving less  than $4  million                                                                   
for  the University.  He explained  that  the University  had                                                                   
put  out a  publication  a month  or  so ago,  specifying  it                                                                   
could be impacted  by $20 million. He remarked  that what the                                                                   
number  would  be was  unknown.  He  wondered if  there  were                                                                   
other plans  for higher education  relief for  the University                                                                   
from the federal government.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
11:34:52 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  OMB had been tracking  impacts                                                                   
to all  state agencies and  the University. He  reported that                                                                   
the  University  was  projecting  significant  impacts  as  a                                                                   
result  of COVID  and decisions  being made  by students.  He                                                                   
highlighted  a  similar  situation where  the  Department  of                                                                   
Fish  and  Game was  impacted  by  decisions made  by  people                                                                   
coming to Alaska  for hunts. Currently, nothing  in the CARES                                                                   
Act allowed for  the backfill of lost revenues;  however, the                                                                   
administration   was   tracking   the  information   for   an                                                                   
understanding  of  what relief  may  be necessary  for  state                                                                   
agencies suffering  from decisions  other people  were making                                                                   
in  response  to   COVID  that  impacted  their   ability  to                                                                   
operate. He explained  it would be a challenge  going forward                                                                   
into budget  development  for the coming  year to  understand                                                                   
some  of the  longer-term  impacts. He  noted  there was  the                                                                   
possibility  that  further  federal  legislation  would  help                                                                   
with  some  of  the  longer-term  impacts,  but  it  was  not                                                                   
guaranteed. He  spoke to the  need to monitor  and understand                                                                   
the impacts as they became more apparent over time.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Josephson  relayed   that   his  staff   had                                                                   
attended  an  Education Committee  meeting  where  University                                                                   
President  Johnson had  testified that  foregone revenue  had                                                                   
reached  $35  million  to  $45 million  due  to  issues  with                                                                   
investment  losses, potential  declines in  tuition fees  and                                                                   
auxiliary  income,  and  research  revenue  if  research  was                                                                   
delayed.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
11:37:18 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  LeBon asked  about grants  directly going  to                                                                   
students.  He asked  if  there were  limitations  on how  the                                                                   
money could  be spent  by students.  He wondered whether  the                                                                   
funds could be used for travel going home.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that  he did not  know the  answer to                                                                   
the question. He  believed someone may be available  from the                                                                   
University to respond.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
ALESIA KRUCKENBERG,  DIRECTOR OF PLANNING AND  BUDGET, OFFICE                                                                   
OF  STRATEGY,  PLANNING,  AND BUDGET,  UNIVERSITY  OF  ALASKA                                                                   
(via   teleconference),   replied   that  there   were   some                                                                   
limitations.  She  relayed that  funding  could  be used  for                                                                   
emergency grants  to students but not for  the institution to                                                                   
recoup funds. She  explained that if the University  paid for                                                                   
students to  travel home  it could  not reimburse  itself for                                                                   
the cost,  but she believed it  was an allowable  expense for                                                                   
the  students.  She noted  that  if  she were  mistaken,  she                                                                   
would follow up with the accurate information.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger highlighted  a National Endowment  of the Arts                                                                   
grant under the  CARES Act in the amount of  $400,000 for the                                                                   
Alaska State  Council on  the Arts.  The funds were  intended                                                                   
to make  grants to art organizations  and local  art agencies                                                                   
to sustain operations through COVID-19.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  addressed  slide   15  showing  $49  million                                                                   
associated with  Federal Aviation Administration  (FAA) rural                                                                   
airport   system   maintenance.   He   explained   that   the                                                                   
allocation  was  part of  a  larger  component from  the  FAA                                                                   
going  to  all owner-operators  of  airports  throughout  the                                                                   
country. He  detailed that $49  million of the  component was                                                                   
designated for rural  airports operated by the  Department of                                                                   
Transportation   and  Public   Facilities  (DOT)   throughout                                                                   
Alaska. The  money could  be used  for general operating  and                                                                   
maintenance  expenditures   in  airports  and   on  airstrips                                                                   
throughout  the state.  He underscored  that  the funds  were                                                                   
for non-international, rural airports in Alaska.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:40:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger pointed  to a  $32.1  million FAA  allocation                                                                   
for international  airports (on slide  16). There was  no RPL                                                                   
associated  with the allocation  because  the money could  be                                                                   
deposited into  the International  Airport Fund and  spent by                                                                   
the international airports on  general airport expenditures.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool noted  that Merrill  Field in  Anchorage                                                                   
was  not a  rural airport.  He  had read  somewhere that  the                                                                   
airport  was  receiving $13  million.  He  asked why  it  was                                                                   
included.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that Merrill  Field was part  of the                                                                   
wider FAA  distribution, but DOT  was not the  owner-operator                                                                   
for the field;  therefore, the funding would  not be included                                                                   
in any money flowing through DOT.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative   LeBon  remarked   that  the  Merrill   Field                                                                   
allocation  appeared   to  be   close  to  $18   million.  He                                                                   
understood  there were  two different  buckets  of money.  He                                                                   
stated  that it  hardly  passed  the red-face-test  that  the                                                                   
Fairbanks   International   Airport   allocation   was   $5.7                                                                   
million, while  the Merrill Field  allocation was  nearly $18                                                                   
million.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
11:42:25 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that the allocations  were calculated                                                                   
by the FAA and  not the state. The state only  had discretion                                                                   
over  how the  money allocated  to  state-operated rural  and                                                                   
international  airports  was spent.  He  explained that  once                                                                   
the state  had the  money it could  allocate to  the projects                                                                   
as  it  saw fit.  He  furthered  that  within the  bucket  of                                                                   
funding for rural  airports, the state did not  have to spend                                                                   
exactly as allocated by the FAA.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger turned  to slide  17 showing  $29 million  in                                                                   
Federal  Transit Administration  grants. The  funds would  go                                                                   
to DOT  for eligible operating  expenses for  Federal Transit                                                                   
Administration  5311  recipients  for  (non-urbanized  areas)                                                                   
including  Anchorage,   Fairbanks,  and  the   Alaska  Marine                                                                   
Highway  System   (AMHS).  The  department  was   looking  at                                                                   
exactly how to  distribute the money. He reported  that about                                                                   
$10 million  would go to AMHS  and the remainder would  go to                                                                   
other surface transportation costs.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  highlighted  a  direct CARES  Act  grant  of                                                                   
$3  million for  measurement  standards  and Whittier  Tunnel                                                                   
support on slide  18. The funding would go  toward unbudgeted                                                                   
and   unanticipated   expenditures    related   to   ensuring                                                                   
continuity of operation and program delivery.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:44:49 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  turned to slide  19 showing $3.6  million for                                                                   
the  Department   of  Public   Safety  (DPS)  for   the  U.S.                                                                   
Department   of   Justice  Byrne-JAG   grant.   The   funding                                                                   
supported  law  enforcement,  prosecution,  defense,  courts,                                                                   
corrections,  crime  victim  and   witness  initiatives,  and                                                                   
other mental  health programs.  The grant  would go  directly                                                                   
from  the  federal   government  to  DPS.  Slide   20  showed                                                                   
$3  million for  the Division  of Elections  to be  deposited                                                                   
into  the  election  fund.  Currently,   there  was  adequate                                                                   
authority  to  deposit  federal revenues  into  the  election                                                                   
fund; however, the  election fund was not subject  to the RPL                                                                   
process, meaning  the ability  to spend  the funds  could not                                                                   
be accessed  through the RPL process.  He noted there  was an                                                                   
existing $3.7 million  project out of the election  fund that                                                                   
could  be  used  for election  security  measures  and  other                                                                   
election  costs the  division would  incur due  to the  COVID                                                                   
crisis.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  believed the legislature  had given                                                                   
authority    in   SB    241   [COVID-19    declaration/relief                                                                   
legislation passed  in 2020] for  the lieutenant  governor to                                                                   
move  to  an all-mail  ballot,  but  he  was not  certain  it                                                                   
covered  the  November  general election.  He  remarked  that                                                                   
Dr.  Anthony Fauci  had  indicated there  would  be a  second                                                                   
wave of the virus  in the fall. He asked if  the monies could                                                                   
be used  for an all-mail  ballot in  the fall to  keep people                                                                   
safe and participating in the democracy.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  responded that he  did not know  the specific                                                                   
criteria  around how  the elections  fund could  be used.  He                                                                   
deferred the question to the Division of Elections.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:47:23 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  concluded the presentation and  was available                                                                   
for any additional questions.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson prefaced his  remarks and  noted he                                                                   
did not mean for  his question to be a "gotcha"  question. He                                                                   
was happy with  the administration's response  to the crisis.                                                                   
However,  the  administration  had  issued  $260  million  in                                                                   
vetoes.  He   understood  that   facts  had  changed,   which                                                                   
happened  to everyone.  He detailed  that the  administration                                                                   
had believed  most of the vetoes  could be supplanted  by the                                                                   
federal dollars.  He asked  if OMB had  an opinion  after the                                                                   
latest  [federal] guidance  about  which  items could  almost                                                                   
surely be supplanted and which items could not.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that at  the time of the  vetoes the                                                                   
administration  had a  different  understanding and  guidance                                                                   
on  how  the CRF  funding  through  the  CARES Act  could  be                                                                   
spent.  The   administration  was   trying  to   ensure  that                                                                   
communities had  as much flexibility  as possible  within the                                                                   
guidance to  use the  funds on anything  related to  COVID to                                                                   
make  certain  normal  resources   could  be  used  to  cover                                                                   
normal,  non-COVID related  expenses. There  were some  areas                                                                   
where there  were not  dollar-for-dollar replacements  of the                                                                   
vetoes,  but there  were resources  going  to communities  to                                                                   
ensure  they  could  cover COVID  related  costs  within  the                                                                   
federal guidance  in order to allow communities  to use their                                                                   
own  limited  resources  to  cover costs  that  may  not  fit                                                                   
within  the  federal  expenditure   guidelines.  It  was  the                                                                   
administration's  goal to  ensure that  communities came  out                                                                   
of the crisis  whole. He noted  there was also the  very real                                                                   
issue  of the  availability  of  financial resources  at  all                                                                   
levels of  government in Alaska.  Whether the costs  could be                                                                   
covered at the state level was also in question.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Josephson  thought   there  was   almost  an                                                                   
inference  that because  of  the changed  circumstances  that                                                                   
some  [vetoed]  items  should  be  overridden  and  that  the                                                                   
administration  may  even  see  it that  way  or  that  there                                                                   
should   be  more   appropriations.  He   pointed  out   that                                                                   
Mr.  Steininger  had  just  stated   that  local  governments                                                                   
should be made  whole. He asked how that would  happen unless                                                                   
the state  provided community  assistance funding  for school                                                                   
bond debt reimbursement for example.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger clarified  that communities needed  to be made                                                                   
whole  for costs  related to  COVID-19, which  the CARES  Act                                                                   
was  enabling the  state to  do -  to ensure  that any  costs                                                                   
related to  COVID were covered  and that municipalities  were                                                                   
not harmed by  costs they incurred to respond  to the crisis.                                                                   
The  administration hoped  that  by providing  municipalities                                                                   
with  maximum  flexibility in  their  use  of the  CARES  Act                                                                   
funding  it  would hold  communities  harmless  for  expenses                                                                   
related to  COVID to  the maximum  extent possible.  The goal                                                                   
was  to enable  communities to  preserve  other resources  to                                                                   
cover non-COVID related costs of governance.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
11:52:05 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tilton  asked if there were any  guidelines on                                                                   
the  grants going  out and  on  any of  the costs  associated                                                                   
with administering the grants.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger   used  grantees  receiving   human  services                                                                   
grants  as an  example.  He  relayed his  understanding  that                                                                   
using   the   funds   to   cover    costs   associated   with                                                                   
administering grants  for expenses related to  COVID would be                                                                   
allowable. He noted  there had not been much  direct guidance                                                                   
on the specific  question. Based on the guidance  released by                                                                   
the Treasury  on April 22,  it appeared administrative  costs                                                                   
associated with providing services was allowable.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Tilton wondered when  funds would  lapse back                                                                   
to the  federal government  if they were  not spent  within a                                                                   
certain timeframe.  She asked if  the timeframe was  based on                                                                   
a federal fiscal year or another deadline.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger answered  that the  current guidance  limited                                                                   
expenditures   through  the  end   of  December   [2020].  He                                                                   
elaborated that  any unused funds  would be returned  at that                                                                   
time. He  shared his understanding  that a normal  accounting                                                                   
process would  be followed where  any encumbered  funds would                                                                   
not need to  be returned. He relayed that  the administration                                                                   
did not  have specific details or  a date when a  final audit                                                                   
of expenditures  would occur. He  noted that the  final audit                                                                   
would be sometime after the December 30 deadline.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
11:55:11 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Tilton  thanked   Mr.  Steininger   for  his                                                                   
answers  and presentation.  She provided  a scenario  where a                                                                   
community  had   funding  that  lapsed.  She   asked  if  the                                                                   
responsibility   to  return   the   funds   to  the   federal                                                                   
government would reside with the state or the community.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  the scenario  was part  of the                                                                   
reason  the  administration  would  require  reporting  [from                                                                   
communities  on fund  expenditures].  He  elaborated that  if                                                                   
the administration  started to  see the situation  develop it                                                                   
could  determine  the  best  logistics.   He  explained  that                                                                   
because  the money  was  distributed  directly  to the  state                                                                   
from the Treasury,  he believed the federal  government would                                                                   
expect  the  state  to  be  responsible   for  returning  the                                                                   
[unused]   funds.  The   state  would   have  to  work   with                                                                   
communities  to  ensure  mechanisms  were in  place  and  the                                                                   
monthly  reporting would  give  visibility  into areas  where                                                                   
issues may arise.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
11:56:19 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  referenced Mr.  Steininger's  statement                                                                   
about aiming  to keep communities  whole from the  effects of                                                                   
COVID-19  and that  the administration  had economic  metrics                                                                   
involved  in  the distribution  of  funds  to  municipalities                                                                   
based  on  tourism  or  fishing  dollars.  He  remarked  that                                                                   
Fairbanks  would not  top  the list  on  tourism or  fishing;                                                                   
however,  the  University  was   a  big  part  of  Fairbanks'                                                                   
economic portfolio  and the University  had stated it  may be                                                                   
impacted by  $30 million to  $40 million. He  elaborated that                                                                   
the University would  receive about half of  the $7.9 million                                                                   
with  the other  half going  to  students. Additionally,  the                                                                   
University may receive a small amount of the K-12 funding.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wool  highlighted   that  it  appeared   the                                                                   
University  would be  severely impacted.  He emphasized  that                                                                   
the impact  would also  affect municipalities where  campuses                                                                   
were  located. He  thought there  seemed to  be a  disconnect                                                                   
about  helping   out  municipalities.   He  elaborated   that                                                                   
Fairbanks  had   a  large  entity   that  would   be  heavily                                                                   
affected.  He thought  it seemed  funds  going toward  higher                                                                   
education  were   diminutive  compared  to  funds   going  to                                                                   
municipalities   or  the   $100  million   for  the   fishing                                                                   
industry.  He  was  not  trying   to  take  away  from  other                                                                   
entities  that  needed  the  funds,  but  he  believed  there                                                                   
should   be  more   effort   toward  the   higher   education                                                                   
component. He  noted that  the University's operating  budget                                                                   
had been  vetoed by  $10 million. He  wondered if  there were                                                                   
further plans to address the situation.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger replied  that  the administration  needed  to                                                                   
continue to  work on budget  development with  the University                                                                   
going forward as  the impacts of COVID were seen.  He did not                                                                   
believe  the  University  had   been  part  of  the  economic                                                                   
activity  metrics.  He  noted  that  the  administration  had                                                                   
worked with the  information available at the  time. The $7.9                                                                   
million had  been allocated through  the CARES Act  to higher                                                                   
education institutions  and was  limited by decisions  at the                                                                   
federal  level.  He spoke  to  the  concerns that  the  state                                                                   
ensured  communities seeing  some of  the outweighed  impacts                                                                   
were  assisted through  its  distribution  of  funds and  the                                                                   
need  to take  second order  impacts  into consideration.  He                                                                   
noted  it could  be  difficult to  ensure  that every  little                                                                   
impacted  area was  being addressed,  but the  administration                                                                   
felt confident there  was a fairly broad  distribution within                                                                   
the plan to try to hit as many areas as possible.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool remarked  that considering funding  over                                                                   
the  long-term was  fine;  however,  he was  confident  there                                                                   
would be immediate  affects felt in September.  He understood                                                                   
the state  had access  to other funds  apart from  the Higher                                                                   
Education  Emergency Relief  Fund,  which he  hoped would  be                                                                   
considered.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:59:58 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz  thanked  the  presenter  for  his  answers                                                                   
during the  meeting. He  returned to  slide 5 that  specified                                                                   
about  $305   million  would  go  directly   to  municipality                                                                   
assistance. He asked  if the administration believed  the RPL                                                                   
process was the  correct process based on the  fact there was                                                                   
no  federal funding  within  the current  budget  for aid  to                                                                   
municipalities.  He   asked  if  the  RPL  process   was  the                                                                   
appropriate  method  to  distribute  the  federal  funds.  He                                                                   
noted the  incoming federal  funds seemed  to be a  different                                                                   
category  of funding than  what currently  existed under  the                                                                   
federal funding category.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Steininger  answered that  the  administration  believed                                                                   
the  RPL  process was  the  correct  process  to use  in  the                                                                   
current  situation.  He  elaborated   that  the  RPL  process                                                                   
through  the  Legislative  Budget  and  Audit  Committee  was                                                                   
designed for  situations where there  was an increase  or new                                                                   
federal receipts  coming into the state after  the budget had                                                                   
passed.  He stated  it  was  the situation  currently  taking                                                                   
place. The administration  was using the  existing mechanisms                                                                   
in order to gain access to the federal relief funds.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz   asked  for  verification   that  the  RPL                                                                   
process was creating  a new category of federal  funding that                                                                   
did not currently exist.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  assumed  that Vice-Chair  Ortiz's use  of the                                                                   
term "new  category" meant  that the funding  was a  new type                                                                   
of  federal grant  that the  state  had not  received in  the                                                                   
past. He  answered that the RPL  process the same way  in the                                                                   
past. For  example, DEED  had recently  received a  new grant                                                                   
for literacy development  that had been accessed  through the                                                                   
RPL  process.  He elaborated  that  the  grant had  not  been                                                                   
received  in  the   past.  He  explained  that   it  was  not                                                                   
necessarily  uncommon to use  the RPL  process to  access new                                                                   
federal grants  that had  not existed in  the past  that came                                                                   
to the  state unexpectedly. The  CARES Act funds  were merely                                                                   
a  much  larger dollar  value  than  the  state was  used  to                                                                   
seeing,  but  the acceptance  of  the  funds was  within  the                                                                   
bounds  of how  the  RPL process  had  been  used before.  He                                                                   
explained that the  RPL process was the most  expeditious way                                                                   
to   accept   federal   revenue   in  the   absence   of   an                                                                   
appropriation   bill  and  when   the  legislature   was  not                                                                   
actively  meeting  in session.  The  administration  believed                                                                   
the RPL  process fit the criteria  for access to  the federal                                                                   
funds.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
12:03:28 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Ortiz  noted that his questions were  not intended                                                                   
as a debate  and he appreciated Mr. Steininger's  answers. He                                                                   
pointed out  that Mr.  Steininger had  spoken about  the time                                                                   
period when the  legislature was not in session.  He believed                                                                   
it was  common practice  for the  RPL process  to be  used in                                                                   
the interim period.  He highlighted that the  legislature was                                                                   
not currently in the interim period.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that  it was  a good point;  however,                                                                   
he clarified that  there was no specific prohibition  [on the                                                                   
use  of the  RPL process  during a  non-interim period].  The                                                                   
administration  had  looked  at the  processes  available  to                                                                   
access  federal  funds  in an  expeditious  way  because  the                                                                   
funds  were  intended to  cover  costs  incurred on  March  1                                                                   
going forward.  He elaborated that  the costs had  been borne                                                                   
for  two months  without  the ability  to  provide relief  to                                                                   
communities  to cover  the costs  being incurred;  therefore,                                                                   
an   expeditious  method   of  payment   was  important.   He                                                                   
explained that  the LB&A RPL  process was something  that was                                                                   
available  and was intended  to access  new federal  revenues                                                                   
coming into  the state. The  administration believed  the RPL                                                                   
process  was the most  appropriate mechanism  to gain  access                                                                   
to  the  funds  and  make  the  distribution  as  quickly  as                                                                   
possible.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Ortiz asked  if the  administration  had a  legal                                                                   
opinion on the  validity of the use of the  RPL process under                                                                   
the current circumstances.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  answered that  he was basing  the use  of the                                                                   
RPL  process  off  of  prior   RPLs  the  administration  had                                                                   
submitted  for  new  revenues  coming in.  For  example,  new                                                                   
revenues  that   may  never  have  been  appropriated   to  a                                                                   
specific  item  before or  new  programs  that had  not  been                                                                   
considered  before.  He cited  an  education  example he  had                                                                   
used earlier in  the meeting. He relayed that the  use of the                                                                   
RPL process  was based on  past practice.  He did not  have a                                                                   
legal opinion in his hand.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
12:05:46 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Sullivan-Leonard thanked  Mr. Steininger  for                                                                   
his diligence  in answering  the questions.  She asked  about                                                                   
AIDEA  funding on  slide 6. She  was concerned  that mom  and                                                                   
pop  small businesses  that may  or may  not have  employees,                                                                   
had fallen  through the cracks  with regard to  receiving PPP                                                                   
[Paycheck  Protection  Program]  support  or SBA  loans.  She                                                                   
asked how  some of  the AIDEA  grants would  be used  to help                                                                   
small businesses.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger  replied that the  RPL had been  structured to                                                                   
touch  on   multiple  state   agencies  because   there  were                                                                   
different  levels of  businesses  in the  state. He  detailed                                                                   
that  some of  the  mom and  pop  businesses  likely did  not                                                                   
interact with AIDEA  in the way they may interact  with other                                                                   
areas within  DCCED. The  administration  was aiming  to have                                                                   
the funding  be available to  businesses lacking  the ability                                                                   
to   receive  support   through   PPP  or   SBA  loans.   The                                                                   
administration  was  very  sensitive   to  the  mom  and  pop                                                                   
businesses  that would  need relief almost  more than  anyone                                                                   
else.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative   LeBon  shared   the  concern  expressed   by                                                                   
Representative  Sullivan-Leonard.  He  stated that  the  best                                                                   
way to take  care of the  smaller mom and pop  businesses was                                                                   
through their  local banks. He  pointed out that  local banks                                                                   
knew  the businesses  and  their  needs. He  elaborated  that                                                                   
AIDEA and  AHFC were  not directly  connected to the  smaller                                                                   
businesses.  He urged  the administration  to  work with  the                                                                   
banks  as  part   of  the  solution  and  do   some  sort  of                                                                   
allocation  program  to  ensure  small  banks  were  able  to                                                                   
participate.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
12:08:30 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston thanked  Mr. Steininger  for his  work and                                                                   
candidness that  some of  the RPLs were  a work  in progress.                                                                   
She  shared  that  she  had  spent   time  pouring  over  the                                                                   
[federal]  guidance, which  she described  as "clear  as mud"                                                                   
in some places.  She noted that she had highlighted  a couple                                                                   
of areas  [in the federal guidance]  and read from  the first                                                                   
page (copy not on file):                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Funds may not  be used to fill shortfalls  in government                                                                   
     revenue to  cover expenditures that would  not otherwise                                                                   
     qualify  under the  statute and although  a broad  range                                                                   
     of  use  is  allowed,  revenue   replacement  is  not  a                                                                   
     permissible use of funds.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston  thought  it  was important  to  keep  the                                                                   
guidance  front  and center  during  the process.  She  cited                                                                   
examples  of   ineligible  expenditures  listed   in  federal                                                                   
guidance  such  as  expenses for  state  share  of  Medicaid;                                                                   
damage  covered by  insurance; payroll  or benefits  expenses                                                                   
for employees  whose duties were not substantially  dedicated                                                                   
to  the response  to  COVID-19;  expenses  that had  been  or                                                                   
would  be   reimbursed  by   other  federal  programs   (e.g.                                                                   
reimbursements   from  other   parts  of   the  CARES   Act);                                                                   
reimbursements  to  donors  for  donated  items  of  service;                                                                   
overtime;   severance  pay;   and   legal  settlements.   She                                                                   
believed legal  settlements were  something the  state needed                                                                   
to be aware of.  She spoke to the need for  transparency. She                                                                   
appreciated Mr. Steininger's work towards transparency.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston stated  that one of  the frequently  asked                                                                   
questions  on the  Treasury's  website  was whether  a  state                                                                   
receiving   a  payment   could   transfer   funds  to   local                                                                   
government.  She reported that  the answer  was yes  and that                                                                   
such funds  would be  subject to  recoupment by the  Treasury                                                                   
if they were not  used in a manner consistent  with the CARES                                                                   
Act.  She relayed  that  the state  had  liability for  funds                                                                   
allocated  to  local  communities  and  for  funds  it  would                                                                   
appropriate.  She reiterated the  importance of  transparency                                                                   
and  spoke   to  the   need  for   cooperation  between   the                                                                   
legislature and  the administration. She emphasized  the need                                                                   
to distribute  the funds as  soon as possible,  while keeping                                                                   
the state's liability and need for transparency in mind.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
12:11:54 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster  thanked Mr. Steininger for the  abundance of                                                                   
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Steininger thanked  the committee for the  opportunity to                                                                   
present   detail   on   the  plan   and   explain   how   the                                                                   
administration   intended   to   provide   the   relief.   He                                                                   
acknowledged  that the  guidance could  be unclear.  He spoke                                                                   
to the need  to ensure the  state's plan was tailored  to the                                                                   
federal  guidance.  He  believed  the  state  would  be  more                                                                   
successful if it  made sure the funds were  made available to                                                                   
those most connected to the response.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
12:13:02 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 12:13 p.m.                                                                                         

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
COVID-19 HFIN CARES Act Presentation 4.24.2020.pdf HFIN 4/24/2020 10:00:00 AM