Legislature(2015 - 2016)BUTROVICH 205

02/01/2016 03:30 PM Senate RESOURCES

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Audio Topic
03:31:19 PM Start
03:31:53 PM Overview: Salmon Genetics
04:37:31 PM Overview: Fiscal Effects of Commercial Fishing, Mining and Tourism
05:07:49 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Overview on Salmon Genetics TELECONFERENCED
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, NOAA
Fisheries
+ Overview: Fiscal Effects of Commercial TELECONFERENCED
Fishing, Mining and Tourism
Bob Loeffler, Institute of Social and Economic
Research, University of Alaska, Anchorage
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                        February 1, 2016                                                                                        
                           3:31 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Cathy Giessel, Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Mia Costello, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator John Coghill                                                                                                            
Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                          
Senator Bert Stedman                                                                                                            
Senator Bill Stoltze                                                                                                            
Senator Bill Wielechowski                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
All members present                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATIVE MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Senator Charlie Huggins                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
OVERVIEW: SALMON GENETICS                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
OVERVIEW: FISCAL EFFECTS OF COMMERCIAL FISHING, MINING AND                                                                      
TOURISM                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
JEFF GUYON, PhD., Fisheries Geneticist                                                                                          
Genetics Program                                                                                                                
National Marine Fisheries Science Center (NMFS)                                                                                 
Auke Bay Laboratories                                                                                                           
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided fish genetics presentation.                                                                      
BILL TEMPLIN                                                                                                                    
Principal Fisheries Geneticist                                                                                                  
Gene Conservation Laboratory                                                                                                    
Division of Commercial Fisheries                                                                                                
Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G)                                                                                      
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided fish genetics presentation.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
BOB LOEFFLER                                                                                                                    
Institute Of Social and Economic Research (ISER)                                                                                
University of Alaska                                                                                                            
Anchorage                                                                                                                       
POSITION STATEMENT:   Provided  report on  fiscal impacts  to the                                                             
state of mining, commercial fishing and tourism.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:31:19 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  CATHY   GIESSEL  called  the  Senate   Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 3:31  p.m. Present at the  call to                                                               
order  were Senators  Stedman,  Coghill, Costello,  Wielechowski,                                                               
and Chair Giessel.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
^Overview: Salmon Genetics                                                                                                      
                   Overview: Salmon Genetics                                                                                
                                                                                                                              
3:31:53 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL announced the overview  of salmon genetics. She had                                                               
actually  heard part  of this  presentation at  a Pacific  States                                                               
Fisheries Commission meeting  last fall and she  thought it would                                                               
be a great topic for the Resources Committee to hear.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:32:41 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE joined the committee.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:33:31 PM                                                                                                                    
JEFF  GUYON,   PhD.,  Fisheries  Geneticist,   Genetics  Program,                                                               
National  Marine  Fisheries  Science   Center  (NMFS),  Auke  Bay                                                               
Laboratories,  Juneau,  Alaska,  said  his talk  is  centered  on                                                               
salmon,  but  they also  work  on  other fish  species  including                                                               
herring in Lynn  Canal and in Prince William  Sound. Genetics are                                                               
used to  distinguish closely related  rock fish species  and they                                                               
had  even worked  collaboratively with  scientists in  Seattle to                                                               
discover a new species of sand lance from Japan.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He explained that in their  lab they take biological samples from                                                               
the fish and digitize it  by using a technique called genotyping.                                                               
The  purpose is  to understand  where  fish are  caught and  what                                                               
their potential impacts are.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He   went  through   some   National   Oceanic  and   Atmospheric                                                               
Administration (NOAA) technical memorandum;  one was data of Chum                                                               
Salmon bycatch  from the  2013 Bering  Sea Walleye  Pollock Trawl                                                               
Fishery. This work  is led by Chris Kondzela  with Jackie Whittle                                                               
and Scott Vulstek.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:34:21 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE joined the committee.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked statistically  if this is  the actual                                                               
number or an extrapolation based on certain ships.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. GUYON responded that he would  be careful about what data are                                                               
extrapolations and what  are direct numbers. He said  the Gulf of                                                               
Alaska Chinook  salmon by  catch is  an extrapolation.  The other                                                               
samples are direct numbers.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL recognized  former Representative  Bill Thomas  in                                                               
the audience.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:35:44 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. GUYON said the chum salmon  bycatch in the Bering Sea happens                                                               
in a very  large pollock trawl fishery that catches  of 1 million                                                               
tons of  pollock. It's quite clean,  but since it's so  large, it                                                               
also  incidentally  catches  a   number  of  other  fish  species                                                               
including chum salmon. So, he  determines where those chum salmon                                                               
are from. He  showed a graph of the magnitude  of the chum salmon                                                               
bycatch by  year from  1994 to  2013. It peaked  in 2007  and the                                                               
sample  set he  would talk  about is  in 2013  when there  was an                                                               
estimated 125,000 chum  salmon bycatch. Before that  there was an                                                               
actual count.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He said people  want to know what stocks of  salmon are caught in                                                               
the Bering  Sea and  they have  looked at  it in  different ways,                                                               
both using scales  and allozymes (a type of  genetic marker). The                                                               
scale  work was  done at  the  University of  Washington and  the                                                               
allozyme  work was  at the  Auke  Bay lab  in collaboration  with                                                               
Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G).                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GUYON said  most  recently they  have  used another  genetic                                                               
marker  called microsatellites  to determine  where the  fish are                                                               
from.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE   said  he  never  heard   the  Pollock  fishery                                                               
characterized as  "pretty clean with a  little incidental catch."                                                               
This isn't how  it was characterized by the governor  when he was                                                               
campaigning for office.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GUYON responded  that the  Pollock fishery  is such  a large                                                               
fishery that bycatch numbers of  both chum and Chinook salmon can                                                               
be quite large  also. In 2005, the chum salmon  catch was 700,000                                                               
fish; in some years Chinook bycatch has exceeded 100,000 fish.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:38:04 PM                                                                                                                    
The next chart aggregated the  chum salmon samples taken from the                                                               
Bering  Sea  back  to  where  they  came  from  using  a  genetic                                                               
baseline. The dots indicated that  they could be intercepted from                                                               
anywhere throughout  their species  range. Each dot  represents a                                                               
collection  of populations  and  those were  aggregated into  six                                                               
different regional aggregations.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He said  the Pollock fishery  occurs throughout the year  and has                                                               
two different  seasons: an A season  and a B season.  The Pollock                                                               
fisheries occurring  in the A  season do not encounter  many chum                                                               
salmon   incidentally.  In   the  B   season,  chum   salmon  are                                                               
incidentally harvested.  The left side  of the chart had  a scale                                                               
indicating  numbers of  fish (from  a census  done in  the Bering                                                               
Sea). The genetic samples were on  the right side. He said a huge                                                               
amount  of effort  - including  observers,  industry, ADF&G,  and                                                               
other - goes into collecting this particular sample set.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
The  next slide  graphed 2013  B  season Chum  salmon Bering  Sea                                                               
bycatch.  Each dot  represented a  vessel; one  intercepted 3,200                                                               
chum salmon and that is  the number of genetic samples collected.                                                               
He emphasized  the massive  amount of  human and  logistic effort                                                               
often working  under very harsh  conditions to get  these samples                                                               
to one lab for analysis.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
The stock composition analysis in  2013 showed that 15 percent of                                                               
the fish  were caught from  Southeast Asia stocks; 45  percent of                                                               
the sample  came from  Northeast Asia  (Russia). This  shows that                                                               
about  60 percent  of the  chum salmon  that were  encountered in                                                               
2013 were derived  from Asian stocks. Forty  percent were derived                                                               
from North American stocks.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
As geneticists,  Mr. Guyon  said, they  take the  proportions and                                                               
extrapolate them based  on the size of the bycatch.  So, in 2013,                                                               
the size  of the bycatch  was 126,000 fish and  those proportions                                                               
can  be multiplied  to  get more  estimates.  For example,  about                                                               
24,000 fish were estimated to  be intercepted from Western Alaska                                                               
in 2013.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE  asked  what  the   department  does  with  that                                                               
information,  because the  state  has policies  that promote  the                                                               
coastal  communities' involvement  in  the Community  Development                                                               
quota  Program  (CDQs) in  these  larger  operations. Those  same                                                               
coastal  communities,  maybe  not the  same  participants,  spend                                                               
research  money  and attention  on  those  chum and  King  salmon                                                               
deficiencies. He  asked how this  scientific information  is used                                                               
to  make political  decisions on  what  is good  for the  Western                                                               
Alaska communities.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GUYON said  they work  the  data through  the North  Pacific                                                               
Fisheries Management  Council (NPFMC)  process, which has  led to                                                               
Amendments  91, 93,  and 97  that  have gone  into the  different                                                               
fishery management plans.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:42:57 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE  asked how  his data gets  to decisions  made in-                                                               
state for Alaskan  interests. For instance, there is  a bill that                                                               
will  enhance the  ease of  loans  for large  vessels for  ground                                                               
fisheries. At the same time  the state is investing large amounts                                                               
of money  in trying  to re-propagate and  research chum  and King                                                               
salmon.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:43:50 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  GUYON  answered  that  data he  produces  goes  through  the                                                               
Council  process that  works very  closely with  ADF&G. He  would                                                               
highlight some  of the connections  and synergies they  have with                                                               
the state along the way.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE asked if the mean  is 165,000 fish and asked him                                                               
they can encourage more of the 24,000 number in 2012.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GUYON said  the median  may  have been  a better  statistic,                                                               
because it  was driven  in large  part by  the 700,000  number in                                                               
2005. Bycatch was pretty stable over  a number of years, but that                                                               
165,000 number  did cause a lot  of concerns. As a  geneticist he                                                               
tries  to develop  the genetics  program  so that  it levels  out                                                               
bycatch throughout the entire process.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR   MICCICHE   asked   if   Chinook/coho   salmon   bycatch                                                               
distribution is  similar to the  chum. Were they heavy  years for                                                               
bycatch or heavy years for a specific species?                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:46:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. GUYON  answered that the  heavy year  for chum salmon  was in                                                               
2005 and the heavy year for Chinook  was in 2007. He said they do                                                               
stock  compositions based  on  time and  area  strata within  the                                                               
Bering Sea to  better understand where particular  stocks of fish                                                               
are  so that  might help  potential management  actions. This  is                                                               
difficult  to do,  because they  are doing  stock composition  on                                                               
fish they are trying not to catch.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He  highlighted  a project  with  the  ADF&G, the  University  of                                                               
Alaska, and  the Western  Alaska Salmon  Coalition that  tried to                                                               
further  differentiate chum  salmon in  Western Alaska  which are                                                               
quite  homogenous  and  difficult   to  separate,  to  understand                                                               
impacts  to  the  Yukon-Kuskokwim  and other  rivers  in  Western                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked him  to put the  number of  salmon in                                                               
peak  years  (500,000   or  600,000  fish)  into   some  sort  of                                                               
perspective. He asked if they  can actually trace the genetics to                                                               
particular streams. In  terms of global bycatch  for chum salmon,                                                               
does he have  any sense of how much chum  salmon are being caught                                                               
globally on a yearly basis?                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  GUYON  answered  the  first question:  they  don't  take  an                                                               
individual  fish and  allocate it  to an  individual stream.  The                                                               
aggregations becomes  more accurate  the larger  the aggregations                                                               
are, because  they are  genetically more  similar. So,  they have                                                               
been  partitioned  to the  six  large  groupings rather  than  an                                                               
individual stream.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
With regard to the total number  of chum salmon around the world,                                                               
one  of   their  statistics,  working  with   the  North  Pacific                                                               
Anadromous  Fish  Commission,  is   hatchery  releases  that  are                                                               
associated with chum salmon. Those  releases are in the billions.                                                               
He didn't  know what the  returns are.  For both the  Chinook and                                                               
chum, which are the two  salmon species that are intercepted, the                                                               
council  has   done  both  economic  and   biologic  analyses  to                                                               
understand  the  impacts to  Western  Alaska.  He could  get  the                                                               
council links  to those particular  sites as he provided  data to                                                               
them.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:49:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. GUYON pointed  out a link to the Chinook  salmon bycatch data                                                               
from 2014  Bering Sea Walleye  Pollock Trawl fishery  to download                                                               
the  report. This  report was  led by  Chuck Guthrie  and Hanhvan                                                               
Nguyen. The  next slide  represented the  Pollock fishery  in the                                                               
Bering Sea  that intercepts chum  and Chinook salmon.  It graphed                                                               
the Chinook  salmon bycatch from  1992 to  2014. The A  season is                                                               
the  spring season  and  the  B season  is  the  fall season  for                                                               
catching  Pollock. These  statistics  were  provided through  the                                                               
National Marine  Fishery Service Regional Office  in Juneau. Work                                                               
was done  using scale  pattern analysis  and genetic  analysis by                                                               
the University  of Washington, the  ADF&G and the NMFS  He wanted                                                               
to  understand the  impacted stocks.  Between  all the  different                                                               
techniques   and  organizations   the   stock  compositions   are                                                               
generally in very good agreement, he said.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
The baseline used  for Chinook salmon is a SNIP  baseline, a type                                                               
of  genetic  marker,  and  each   dot  represents  an  individual                                                               
population that have been genotyped  and then aggregated based on                                                               
their  genetic similarities.  They have  been aggregated  into 11                                                               
different stock groupings.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Like  with chum  salmon,  the next  slide  graphed the  different                                                               
weeks of  the Chinook  salmon Bering  Sea bycatch  throughout the                                                               
2014  fishery with  dots representing  genetic samples  that were                                                               
collected.  Again he  said this  represents a  massive amount  of                                                               
work from a  large number of people. He also  cautioned that data                                                               
for seven  years was collected  differently from one year  to the                                                               
next.  The graph  shows  about  50 percent  of  the samples  were                                                               
derived  from coastal  Western Alaska  in 2014.  These particular                                                               
groupings represent river systems that  flow into the Bering Sea.                                                               
So, the largest  proportion of fish that are being  caught in the                                                               
Bering Sea are from river systems  that flow into the Bering Sea.                                                               
Stocks from throughout the species  range are intercepted in this                                                               
particular fishery.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
This is different  than the genetic analysis led by  the same two                                                               
people of the  Chinook salmon bycatch in the 2014  Gulf of Alaska                                                               
Trawl fishery that just came out a  few weeks ago. It has a small                                                               
but  considerable  Pollock  fishery,  rock  fish  and  Arrowtooth                                                               
flounder trawl  fisheries that also  intercept Chinook  salmon as                                                               
bycatch. Again he determined where they are from.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE asked  if  an acceptable  amount  of bycatch  is                                                               
sustainable,  although Alaska  doesn't have  any decision  making                                                               
ability on it. How could Alaskan interests be manifested?                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:54:36 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. GUYON  answered that as geneticists  they provide information                                                               
which  goes through  a council  process, which  goes through  and                                                               
identifies using  economic and biological modeling  to assess the                                                               
potential impacts that helps with ruling making activity.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL asked if there is  an overlay of Yukon River chum                                                               
and Chinook bycatch.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. GUYON said he would show  one of the differences between them                                                               
in a previous graph.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:57:35 PM                                                                                                                    
He  went  back   to  chart  of  the  Chinook   salmon  that  were                                                               
intercepted in the  Bering Sea during the A and  B seasons of the                                                               
Pollock fishery. Chinook salmon  was intercepted in both seasons.                                                               
Chum salmon were  not intercepted in the A season,  but they were                                                               
intercepted in the B season.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said his point is  that on the Lower  Yukon when                                                               
it was  time to catch fish,  the Kings were forbidden  except for                                                               
catch and release, and it  was exceedingly difficult. For them to                                                               
run  so  differently  in  the  bycatch time  means  to  him  that                                                               
something is happening at the near coast.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Guyon explained  that for the Pollock fishery in  the Gulf of                                                               
Alaska the  bycatch was  estimated with help  from the  ADF&G and                                                               
University of  Washington and  other was work  done by  the NMFS.                                                               
The data they get from both  different types of analysis are very                                                               
similar, which is good. He explained  that in the Gulf of Alaska,                                                               
collecting samples  and estimating  bycatch is  done differently.                                                               
This is  because observers are  deployed differently than  in the                                                               
Bering Sea, where  the vessels are larger and there  is more room                                                               
to put the  samples. In the Gulf, the vessels  are smaller and so                                                               
it's more  difficult to  put people  on them.  Therefore, genetic                                                               
samples  are  taken  from  a   systematic  random  sampling  from                                                               
particular cruises.  From these  samples a weighted  estimate (by                                                               
time and space) is produced for the entire catch.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:59:25 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE  asked if one  could assume that the  reason the                                                               
other three species  of Pacific salmon are not  a bycatch problem                                                               
is  because they  aren't there  while the  Pollock fisheries  are                                                               
happening, or is there some other reason.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. GUYON answered that is not  his area of expertise, but it may                                                               
have something to  do with how the fish are  intercepted. Are the                                                               
salmon interacting  with the  Pollock? Are  the salmon  above the                                                               
Pollock and  being intercepted  by the  net as  the net  is going                                                               
down or  coming up? There  may be differences in  life strategies                                                               
between the different  fish of where they  are being intercepted,                                                               
especially at the distance they are from the shore.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:00:42 PM                                                                                                                    
He continued that in the Gulf  of Alaska it's generally a Chinook                                                               
salmon  bycatch  issue.  Not many  chum  salmon  are  intercepted                                                               
there, although  his last  report contains a  sample set  of chum                                                               
salmon  from the  Gulf.   Using  weighted  techniques, which  are                                                               
developed in coordination with Bill  Templin's group at ADF&G, he                                                               
graphed  the stock  compositions in  the Gulf  of Alaska  for the                                                               
various  years. Again  he cautioned  that samples  were collected                                                               
differently. Anyhow, he  said the salmon that  are encountered in                                                               
the Gulf  are different than  the ones encountered in  the Bering                                                               
Sea.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
The last  two slides were  of other  trawl fisheries in  the Gulf                                                               
including  a rockfish  trawl fishery.  An area  off of  Kodiak is                                                               
part of that fishery, and  industry voluntarily collected samples                                                               
and sent  them to the Auke  Bay lab for analysis.  Based on these                                                               
census they produced a stock  composition, which is suggestive of                                                               
fish from  the West Coast  of the United State,  British Columbia                                                               
and the Gulf of Alaska flowing stock.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:02:22 PM                                                                                                                    
Likewise, there is also an  Arrowtooth flounder trawl fishery for                                                               
which industry  volunteered to  collect samples.  In 2014  it was                                                               
the majority  of fish that were  sampled and sent to  the lab. It                                                               
had  the  same type  of  result  and  the  map showed  where  the                                                               
fisheries are occurring.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
The last slide was an acknowledgement  of all the people he works                                                               
with, the  North Pacific Groundfish and  Halibut Observer Program                                                               
that provides amazing  sample sets, the people in  ADF&G, and two                                                               
groups that  provided rock fish and  Arrowtooth flounder samples.                                                               
The genetic part  is funded by the NMPFS,  the Alaska Sustainable                                                               
Salmon  Fund,  and  a  non-federal match  by  the  North  Pacific                                                               
Fisheries Research Foundation, an industry group.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  thanked him  and invited Mr.  Templin to  give his                                                               
presentation.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:04:05 PM                                                                                                                    
BILL TEMPLIN,  Principal Fisheries Geneticist,  Gene Conservation                                                               
Laboratory, Division  of Commercial Fisheries,  Alaska Department                                                               
of  Fish  and Game  (ADF&G),  Anchorage,  Alaska, said  he  often                                                               
receives the question,  why does ADF&G have a  genetics lab. It's                                                               
mainly because  their job is  to help the department  achieve its                                                               
mission, which  is to protect,  maintain, improve and  manage the                                                               
fish and game  and aquatic plant resources of the  state. This is                                                               
done  so that  they  can  develop in  the  best  interest of  the                                                               
economy and the  wellbeing of the people of the  state. They have                                                               
to  figure  out  how  to   balance  things  like  protecting  and                                                               
maintaining with improving and  managing. Genetics technology can                                                               
be  used  to  address  information  needs  as  well  as  to  make                                                               
decisions on things like hatchery permitting and human uses.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The  lab's   services  generally   fall  into   four  categories:                                                               
understanding  the  resource,  developing  the  capabilities  for                                                               
management using rapidly  increasing technology available through                                                               
genetics. They also use the  information they gain to help assess                                                               
genetic risk (one of their  main responsibilities in a permitting                                                               
setting),  and they  use this  information to  inform and  assess                                                               
management actions. So, after the  fact or in-season they can use                                                               
information  provided through  genetics  to  actually manage  the                                                               
resource.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Some questions they receive are:                                                                                                
Did exposure to oil cause genetic  injury? - this is in reference                                                               
to the  effects of the oil  spill in Prince William  Sound.  What                                                               
species of  salmon is this? -  this is in reference  to receiving                                                               
samples from putative Atlantic salmon  captured in Alaska waters.                                                               
Is  this crab  a hybrid?  Which  brood stock  are these  hatchery                                                               
salmon from? What is the  genetic structure of these populations?                                                               
-  this is  in reference  to developing  new information  on coho                                                               
salmon in Cook Inlet. Where are  the fish going? - Chinook salmon                                                               
in the  Yukon River  is a  good example, as  fish pass  the Pilot                                                               
Station test  fishery. They get  samples and run  them in-season,                                                               
which allows  them to  estimate the Canadian  component to  get a                                                               
sense of  what how to  meet treaty needs. Finally,  more locally,                                                               
whose fish are  being harvested? An example would  be the Chinook                                                               
salmon  harvested in  Southeast Alaska  under the  Pacific Salmon                                                               
Treaty.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:08:45 PM                                                                                                                    
He gave four examples:                                                                                                          
Red king crab are an important  resource for the State of Alaska.                                                               
They occur  throughout the  North Pacific and  the Bering  Sea; a                                                               
good portion extends  over Southeast Alaska. In  order to provide                                                               
information for  management of this  resource, they  took samples                                                               
from  populations  across  the  state  from  Southeast  and  into                                                               
Bristol  Bay  near  the  Pribiloffs,  in  Norton  Sound  and  the                                                               
Aleutians, as well as from the Okhotsk Sea.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL recognized Senator Huggins in the audience.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:09:53 PM                                                                                                                  
He said a  way of looking at genetic relationships  is by using a                                                               
map of  genetic space rather  than geography. The closer  any two                                                               
(population)  points  are  the  more similar  they  are  and  the                                                               
further apart  they are the  more distinct they  are genetically.                                                               
The  map inset  from Southeast  Alaska  had red  dots very  close                                                               
together,  but genetically  there was  some distance  among them.                                                               
One of  the blue dots  came from  the Aleutians, one  from Norton                                                               
Sound and one from Russia.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He pointed out that  a red dot in the upper  left hand corner was                                                               
from Seymour Canal.  So, the largest distinctions  among red King                                                               
crab populations in this data set  come from the smallest area of                                                               
collection within  Southeast Alaska. Looking across  the range of                                                               
the species, each  dot indicates a population and  its measure of                                                               
genetic diversity.  So, basically  one sees  a trend  moving from                                                               
west  to east  that  is decreasing  in  genetic diversity  within                                                               
populations.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN said the implications of the study are:                                                                             
1. The understanding of the  historical contingencies that led to                                                               
this population structure, which  also helps them understand what                                                               
might happen in  the future, especially in  changing climates and                                                               
landscapes, and human activities.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2. It lets them  know that the red King crab  might in some areas                                                               
be managed on  a much smaller geographic area and  in other areas                                                               
in a much larger geographic area.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3.  It  provides information  on  human  activities. An  on-going                                                               
program  looks  at  hatchery supplementation  of  red  King  crab                                                               
stocks.  So, this  information can  be used  to guide  permitting                                                               
decisions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4. It  allows development of  capabilities. Without  the baseline                                                               
for  Chinook salmon  in the  North Pacific  that Dr.  Guyon spoke                                                               
about  none  of that  work  that  he  showed would  be  possible;                                                               
likewise none  of the smaller  amounts of  work in Cook  Inlet or                                                               
Copper River  or on the  Yukon, or elsewhere, would  be possible.                                                               
So, the  effort to  put together  this large  coast-wide baseline                                                               
developed capabilities for the state  and for many other agencies                                                               
- including international groups.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
In  order to  do this,  Mr. Templin  said they  had to  work with                                                               
international  colleagues through  the  North Pacific  Anadromous                                                               
Fish Commission  to get samples  from throughout the  range. They                                                               
also  worked with  colleagues in  the  Pacific Salmon  Commission                                                               
arena up and  down the West Coast and in  British Columbia, which                                                               
provides information  and samples  from the  eastern side  of the                                                               
species range.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TEMPLIN showed  a map  of all  172 populations  put together                                                               
colored  by regional  grouping. If  this is  all thrown  together                                                               
into a  "tree" each dot corresponds  to a place on  the map. This                                                               
difference  between  populations   is  measured  using  different                                                               
branches.  The map  indicates that  populations  from some  areas                                                               
group together and  in other areas populations are  far apart. He                                                               
pointed out  that Western  Alaska, Norton  Sound down  to Bristol                                                               
Bay   are   genetically   very  similar   to   each   other   but                                                               
geographically very disparate. It's the  same on the Yukon River,                                                               
and this is  the kind of information they use  for meeting treaty                                                               
needs on the Yukon River.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:14:50 PM                                                                                                                    
It also  helps them integrate  with federal marine  studies where                                                               
juvenile salmon are  captured. This information is used  to get a                                                               
sense of  where juvenile  salmon leaving  these rivers  are going                                                               
and  combining that  with ecological  studies to  get a  sense of                                                               
what the survivals will be in the next four or five years.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE said the river  system distribution in Northwest                                                               
Western Alaska  where the yellow  boxes congregate  and Southeast                                                               
Alaska have  a similar coast  distance, but  they seem to  be all                                                               
over the place. He asked what he attributes that to.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TEMPLIN answered  that there  are a  couple of  theories out                                                               
there. One has to  do the fact that most of  the area was covered                                                               
with glaciers  and there could  be no salmon.  The recolonization                                                               
of rivers  over time,  whether they  came from  the south  or the                                                               
west coupled  with the  amount of  time the  area had  been open,                                                               
contributed  to a  lot of  geographic  variability, and  glaciers                                                               
affected some  areas more  than others.  In Southeast  Alaska, he                                                               
surmised, they  are seeing the  effect of  colonization, recently                                                               
receding glaciers and the expansion  from populations down south,                                                               
which have a much larger  reserve of genetic diversity during the                                                               
glacial maximum than the group out  to the west in the Bering Sea                                                               
and Russia areas.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:17:08 PM                                                                                                                    
Using that  information in combination  with federal  studies and                                                               
international  colleagues  -  Russians  and  Japanese  high  seas                                                               
programs through  the North Pacific Anadromous  Fish Commission -                                                               
the stock  compositions are boiled  down (on the right)  and that                                                               
gives them  a sense of  Chinook salmon movements during  time and                                                               
across seasons in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:17:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  TEMPLIN addressed  managing  hatcheries and  said there  are                                                               
five populations, but over time  they come to equilibrium (slides                                                               
17-32  show  cartoons  of  genetic  risk  assessment  variables).                                                               
Samples  are  taken  from  one   of  these  populations  and  are                                                               
reproduced in a hatchery and  these are released for harvest. But                                                               
over  time,  if the  fish  are  constantly  going back  into  the                                                               
hatchery,  there  is  a  different  selection  pressure  and  the                                                               
expectation  is  that the  fish  become  domesticated over  time.                                                               
However,  if  the hatchery  fish  stray  into other  populations,                                                               
those populations become more and more like the hatchery fish.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He said it would be so  much better if they had some information,                                                               
so  they went  to Prince  William Sound  (PWS) and  got chum  DNA                                                               
samples  for the  population prior  to the  hatchery and  samples                                                               
from today.  They looked for  a change in that  population across                                                               
time to see whether that hatchery had an effect.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  asked if "wild"  is a scientific term,  since it                                                               
is used widely as a  marketing term, and what the differentiation                                                               
is between a hatchery fish that is  out there on its own versus a                                                               
"wild" fish.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TEMPLIN said  a  lot of  people ask  that.  Generally, in  a                                                               
situation where the fish have come  from a natural system but may                                                               
have had  hatchery influence  they use the  term "natural."  In a                                                               
place where there has been  no hatchery influence they might call                                                               
them "wild." There are no hard and fast rules.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TEMPLIN  went on  to  explain  that  the effects  they  have                                                               
measured from  this program  in Prince  William Sound  study show                                                               
that  the  natural  populations   in  streams  have  not  changed                                                               
appreciably by  being in  the presence  of the  hatchery. Whether                                                               
you call them "wild" or "natural"  is a decision that hasn't been                                                               
made yet. They are called  "wild" under the state's Hatchery Wild                                                               
Program,  a  large  scale  study  of the  pink  and  chum  salmon                                                               
hatcheries  in   Prince  William   Sound  and  the   chum  salmon                                                               
hatcheries in Southeast Alaska.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:23:09 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE asked why then  do fish stray if strict controls                                                               
are used.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN  answered that  there are  several answers  for that.                                                               
One is that  straying is a fundamental life  history strategy for                                                               
salmon.  They  return generally  to  the  place where  they  were                                                               
spawned;  it provides  an  advantage to  those  fish that  return                                                               
because  it was  at  least good  enough when  they  were born  to                                                               
provide for  their children. But  straying is also  a fundamental                                                               
opportunistic life history where a  fish takes the bet that maybe                                                               
he will  find a place that  has less competition or  is better in                                                               
some  way.  There  is  no controlling  fish  returning  to  these                                                               
streams - no weirs of fish gates  - so they rely upon the biology                                                               
of the species, in general, to return to where it was born.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Then  through genetics  policy,  some hatcheries  are sited  away                                                               
from other salmon  streams of similar species,  like in Southeast                                                               
Alaska where  Chinook salmon hatcheries  are sited away  from the                                                               
sensitive areas  where natural production occurs.  In places like                                                               
PWS  or  Cook   Inlet  an  integrated  system   is  used  whereby                                                               
hatcheries  are  sited  right  next to  the  stream  where  stock                                                               
originally came from to reduce the effect of straying.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE asked if the  straying incidents of an imprinted                                                               
outgoing smolt from  a river system is higher  with hatchery fish                                                               
than with  the natural population,  because the diagram  seems to                                                               
suggest that.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN answered yes, but  they don't have natural stray rate                                                               
information right  now, because it  would be hard to  control and                                                               
expensive to do.  However, the stray rate from a  hatchery can be                                                               
measured, because  all hatchery  fish in PWS  are marked  with an                                                               
otolith (ear bone) mark. It  is however, too expensive to conduct                                                               
this analysis stream by stream.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  asked if  any area  of the  state is  lacking in                                                               
genetic  information -  if he  could pick  a weak  spot of  state                                                               
management.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN answered that is  difficult, because there are places                                                               
where  they  don't  have  information,  but  those  places  don't                                                               
necessarily have a management need.  As management needs arise or                                                               
as the  importance of an issue  arises they begin to  put a study                                                               
in place, much  like in Cook Inlet over the  last three years. Up                                                               
until 2012  there wasn't a real  driving need to spend  money and                                                               
resources  on  developing  coho salmon  capabilities  there,  but                                                               
since then they have devoted a lot  of time and effort and made a                                                               
lot of  progress towards developing  the baselines and  doing the                                                               
application to fisheries.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE remarked  that the  driving need  came from  the                                                               
Mat-Su Valley  delegation and Southcentral folks;  it didn't come                                                               
from other areas of the state or the department.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:28:45 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  TEMPLIN continued  that study  implied  that the  population                                                               
structure  PWS chum  salmon populations  has not  visibly eroded.                                                               
However, an  introgression (insertion of hatchery  genes into the                                                               
wild  population gene  pools) was  measured indicating  that both                                                               
distance  from the  hatchery  and life  history  can affect  that                                                               
introgression rate.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He pointed out that the  West Salmon Stock Identification Program                                                               
(WSSIP) is  a large  program funded  by the  state that  rose out                                                               
Area  M interception  fisheries, which  affect a  large group  of                                                               
people in  Western Alaska.  The idea was  that genetics  might be                                                               
able to help  out with resolving this issue.  Senator Ted Stevens                                                               
said  he would  provide his  political  support to  fund a  large                                                               
scale  collaborative genetic  stock identification  study if  all                                                               
the   stakeholders   could   get  together   on   the   necessary                                                               
information,  the study  design, and  the results,  so that  they                                                               
were  all working  together whether  or  not they  agreed on  the                                                               
answers. And a  large group of people and  organizations did join                                                               
including  Native associations,  fishing associations,  and local                                                               
municipalities. While there  is still a lot  of interpretation on                                                               
what the results  mean there has been no argument  on the science                                                               
because everyone was involved and agreed to the numbers.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
For a sense  of scale, this study encompassed  3300 kilometers of                                                               
coastline, the  equivalent of either  the west or the  east coast                                                               
of the United  States. It involved large numbers  of fish: 74,000                                                               
individual chum salmon  and 82,000 sockeye in a year  and a half,                                                               
where  previously  the samples  were  around  5,000. It  answered                                                               
questions like  what stocks are  caught in the fishery,  how many                                                               
fish were caught, or what fishery catches my stock.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
The flag ship  is the Port Moller test fishery,  which occurs in-                                                               
season  and  provides real-time  information  that  is useful  to                                                               
managers, fishermen and to processors.  The information is turned                                                               
around  very  quickly prior  to  fish  actually arriving  in  the                                                               
districts.  It  answers questions  like  what  stocks are  coming                                                               
through or are there still a  lot of Kvichak fish coming in. This                                                               
information gets picked up in  the trades that publish up-to-date                                                               
information on  fish movements.  Thanks to  the Port  Moller Test                                                               
Fishery, the processors and boats were  able to get to the waters                                                               
in time. Otherwise,  they would have missed the  massive late run                                                               
that arrive significantly later than the 10 year run average.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked if all  that information in the charts                                                               
is on-line somewhere.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN  answered yes.  It's in  the form  of a  news release                                                               
that goes out  to the public every  four days or so and  it is on                                                               
the ADF&G's Commercial Fish Division website.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEDMAN commented that he  heard Mr. Templin say that red                                                               
crab  in Seymour  Canal is  genetically different  from those  in                                                               
Stevens  Passage  and  other  areas   and  asked  where  else  in                                                               
Southeast they sampled.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN said  he didn't have the full list,  but he knew they                                                               
went  to  Barlow  Cove  and   Seymour  Canal  -  mostly  northern                                                               
Southeast Alaska.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEDMAN  asked him to  get the information on  where they                                                               
went in southern Southeast.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. TEMPLIN answered that he would get that for him.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
  ^Overview: Fiscal Effects of Commercial Fishing, Mining and                                                               
                            Tourism                                                                                         
   Overview: Fiscal Effects of Commercial Fishing, Mining and                                                               
                            Tourism                                                                                         
                                                                                                                              
4:37:31 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL  said she invited  Bob Loeffler from  the Institute                                                               
of Social and  Economic Research to present a report  that he and                                                               
Steve  Colt   recently  completed   on  the  Fiscal   Impacts  of                                                               
Commercial Fishing, Mining and Tourism  in Alaska, to put some of                                                               
the fiscal challenges they face into context.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:37:38 PM                                                                                                                    
BOB LOEFFLER,  Institute Of Social and  Economic Research (ISER),                                                               
University of Alaska,  Anchorage, said this is  an updated report                                                               
that  was  done by  the  Department  of Commerce,  Community  and                                                               
Economic Development (DCCED)  about 10 years ago  that was called                                                               
"The  Net  Benefits  Study."  He emphasized  that  they  are  not                                                               
talking about  the net  benefits to the  state; they  are talking                                                               
about something  smaller: what  the state  spends versus  what it                                                               
gets in revenues.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:38:44 PM                                                                                                                    
He acknowledged his co-author Steve  Colt, a University of Alaska                                                               
Anchorage (UAA) Professor  of Economics. He said  his position at                                                               
ISER is funded  by a grant from the Council  of Alaska Producers.                                                               
The conclusions are his and Mr. Colt's.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
The fiscal benefits  in this report relate solely  to revenues to                                                               
the state versus  expenditures to manage or  promote an industry.                                                               
It  does not  include those  broader things  that everyone  cares                                                               
about like jobs, income, and local businesses.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He  started  with  commercial  fishing,  which  gives  about  $50                                                               
million  to local  communities.  The state  receives roughly  $70                                                               
million.  Overall  the  commercial fishing  industry  gives  more                                                               
money than  the state expends and  about the same amount  goes to                                                               
the  local  communities as  revenue  sharing.  It's an  important                                                               
foundation  of  local  community  fiscal stability.  But  if  the                                                               
state's operating  costs for  commercial fishing  in FY  2014 are                                                               
added  in,  the  state  spends  about $8  million  more  than  it                                                               
receives in  revenue. If the  capital budget is factored  in, the                                                               
gap is about $27 million  less. For some caveats, the researchers                                                               
took the  FY 2014 operating  budget. Revenues were  averaged over                                                               
five  years, while  capital budget  for  commercial fishing  were                                                               
averaged over three years.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE  asked how  much  is  available in  unrestricted                                                               
general fund  (GF) revenue that  is available for  roads, schools                                                               
that is not already obligated in the budget.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER  answered that  the 53 percent  of that  $70 million                                                               
the  state gets  from the  commercial fishing  industry is  "true                                                               
taxes," which  are what the  legislature can use for  any purpose                                                               
whatsoever.  The fees  used  for agency  management  is what  the                                                               
legislature  dedicates back  to that  agency. The  last third  is                                                               
what he called "pass-through taxes"  where the commercial fishing                                                               
industry  decides  on its  own  to  levy  a  fee for  a  specific                                                               
purpose,  like  in  PWS,  they  might support  a  hatchery  or  a                                                               
marketing effort.  Then the legislature  collects that  money and                                                               
allocates  it back  to that  purpose, often  through the  capital                                                               
budget, but sometimes through the operating budget.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE said the Revenue  Source Book from the Department                                                               
of Revenue  shows that the  fisheries business and  the fisheries                                                               
resource landings amounted to $26.4  million two fiscal years ago                                                               
and last year it was $24.8 million.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER  responded that in  2014, using the average  of five                                                               
years the state  received about $28 million from  those two taxes                                                               
and passed  an equivalent  amount to  local governments.  He said                                                               
the industry pays 15 separate taxes in his three-part chart.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE said when people  think about revenues they think                                                               
about funding  that is all  available for roads and  schools, but                                                               
this doesn't apply to that.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LOEFFLER added  that other  than the  pass through  revenue,                                                               
about two-thirds of the $70 million go for those things.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He  said the  next question  is where  the $78  million from  the                                                               
fishing industry gets  spent in the operating  budget. About two-                                                               
thirds of  it goes to ADF&G  and some for marketing  in the DCCED                                                               
and about 10 percent goes to enforcement for DPS.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
The capital budget, for which  they took a three-year average and                                                               
found 51  projects related to  commercial fishing which  added up                                                               
to about $20 million a year.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE  noted  how studies  in  general  have  limited                                                               
value, but he  appreciates the effort. He asked  how he accounted                                                               
for sport fishing opportunities in the study.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:46:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. LOEFFLER  answered that the Division  of Commercial Fisheries                                                               
also manages  subsistence, but he asked  them how much of  the GF                                                               
goes to subsistence. He then  subtracted that from the GF amount.                                                               
In general they looked at  GF revenues and expenditures only, (no                                                               
federal  funds or  special  funds), and  if  there was  something                                                               
special that was unrelated to  the commercial fishery, they tried                                                               
to divide it off. They took  about two-thirds of the total budget                                                               
and allocated  it towards commercial  fishing. They tried  not to                                                               
count  things  that  didn't go  towards  the  commercial  fishing                                                               
industry.  They  probably  overestimated  genetic  data  analysis                                                               
which is used for a variety of things.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE said he believes  that every industry should pay                                                               
its own way and  be a net benefit to the state,  and he wanted to                                                               
make sure  he understood the  full benefits of  these industries,                                                               
and calculate how  they should be taxed in a  way that helps them                                                               
pay their own way.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER said  he was trying not to  make any recommendations                                                               
on how to tax industries and  he knows he didn't account for many                                                               
of the  benefits of  the commercial fishing  industry that  go to                                                               
local communities. He made it  very clear those elements were not                                                               
in his scope.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI asked  if he  had the  revenue figures  for                                                               
what each  industry -  commercial fishing,  mining and  tourism -                                                               
generates.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LOEFFLER answered  that elsewhere  in the  study he  has the                                                               
total  ex-vessel   value  but  not   the  profit,   because  that                                                               
information is  proprietary. The graph shows  how ex-vessel value                                                               
changes. He  said conclusions from  one portion of  the industry,                                                               
like the Upper  Yukon, are not necessarily true  for other areas,                                                               
like  Bristol  Bay, and  revenues  change  dramatically with  run                                                               
strength and prices. This is why they used a five-year average.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Finally, he said  commercial fishing is not managed  the same way                                                               
oil is.  The purpose  for managing fisheries  is not  to maximize                                                               
revenue for the  state; it's for a lot of  other things, as well.                                                               
The  fiscal impact  of commercial  fishing  is probably  slightly                                                               
less than the state operating cost,  a little less if you include                                                               
the  capital budget,  which he  assumed would  be smaller  in the                                                               
future, but it provides a lot of revenue to local governments.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL said the full report is on the ISER website.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEDMAN  pointed out  between the oil  and the  fish that                                                               
one is finite and one is not.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER went on to the  mining industry for which he did the                                                               
same  analysis. Mining  brings  in  revenues to  the  state of  a                                                               
little less  than $100 million,  but the cost  to manage it  is a                                                               
lot  less  than  for  commercial  fishing,  (in  FY14  about  $10                                                               
million). Mining  brings in  6 to  8 times what  is spent  and it                                                               
adds another $22 million to  local government. Unlike fishing and                                                               
to some  extent tourism, which  is broadly spread  throughout the                                                               
state, large  mines fund most  of their local  governments. There                                                               
are only six  large scale active mines in Alaska.  The Red Dog is                                                               
the only taxpayer  in the Northwest Arctic  Borough; Greens Creek                                                               
and Kensington are the two  largest taxpayers in Juneau; and Fort                                                               
Knox is  the largest  taxpayer except  the pipeline  in Fairbanks                                                               
and Usibelli provides money to the Denali Borough.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
With  respect to  revenue,  about 40  percent  comes from  mining                                                               
license taxes, about one-third from  the corporate income tax and                                                               
about 20 percent (rents and  royalties) from the three mines that                                                               
are  on state  land. With  respect to  cost, most  of that  comes                                                               
through  the Department  of Natural  Resources  (DNR), some  from                                                               
Department of  Revenue (DOR)  and a  significant amount  from the                                                               
Department of Law (DOL), because  "as it turns out that everybody                                                               
sues mines."                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mining has an  interesting arrangement where for  the large mines                                                               
the state bills  back to the large mines, the  cost of permitting                                                               
and some costs  for compliance and enforcement.  Those are billed                                                               
through DNR, but the costs are  actually to DCCED and ADF&G. This                                                               
is a voluntary program.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:53:10 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MICCICHE  asked  how  he   values  the  cost  between  a                                                               
renewable  fish, timber,  and tourism  resource versus  a severed                                                               
resource.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LOEFFLER  said  he  was   talking  about  social  costs  and                                                               
benefits, but  he didn't  do that.  He just  stuck to  the fiscal                                                               
impacts to the state.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE clarified  Mr. Loeffler  was presenting  the GF                                                               
impacts.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER  answered yes  and the  Permanent Fund.  He recapped                                                               
that four  local governments  get a  significant amount  of money                                                               
from  mining, because  it's  the four  places  where large  mines                                                               
exist within a local government.  He also pointed out the capital                                                               
budget averaged  around $4  million a year.  There were  only two                                                               
real  capital budget  programs (Ambler  Mining  District and  the                                                               
Strategic and Critical Minerals Assessment).                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:54:37 PM                                                                                                                    
He used  mining revenues, like  fish revenues, depend  on prices.                                                               
So, 10  years ago when  prices were $250  an ounce for  gold, the                                                               
state got a lot  less revenue. Now, the state gets  a lot more as                                                               
the number  of mines has increased  as well as the  price of zinc                                                               
and gold.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He didn't  include some  revenues in  the study  for a  couple of                                                               
reasons. The Alaska Railroad that  gets $20 million from Usibelli                                                               
Coal Mine is not included for  two reasons. First, the revenue is                                                               
greater than  the cost,  but more importantly,  it doesn't  go to                                                               
the   legislature.   It   is  separate   and   doesn't   get   GF                                                               
appropriations  for operating  and  it  doesn't return  operating                                                               
monies  to  the  state.  The Alaska  Industrial  Development  and                                                               
Export Authority  (AIDEA) is  a similar  situation. Red  Dog paid                                                               
$12 million in 2013  for use of the Red Dog  road owned by AIDEA;                                                               
AIDEA had  bonds to build that  road and they cost  less than the                                                               
$12 million, but AIDEA keeps that  money. Some is returned to the                                                               
legislature, but they didn't track that back.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:56:48 PM                                                                                                                    
The  overall  conclusions for  mining  are  that the  revenue  is                                                               
significantly  greater  than  the   cost  and  there  are  enough                                                               
concentrated municipalities  to fiscally depend upon  the revenue                                                               
for the mining industry.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER  said tourism  is harder  to quantify.  For example,                                                               
the  sport  fishery   is  managed  for  tourists   but  also  for                                                               
residents. A capital appropriation  given to the Anchorage Museum                                                               
helps  the  50  percent  of their  visitation  which  comes  from                                                               
tourists, but  it also  help residents. So,  there is  an overlap                                                               
that  is difficult  to  assess and  the  tourism conclusions  are                                                               
somewhat less precise than for the other industries.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
He  said   tourism  brings   in  about   $80  million   to  local                                                               
communities. For just  the state, tourism brings  in roughly $18-                                                               
20 million more than the  operating budget and adding the average                                                               
capital  budget from  2012/13 tourism  breaks  even. But  tourism                                                               
provides a  lot of  money for local  communities. Less  than half                                                               
the revenue is  from cruise ship taxes instituted  in 2006, about                                                               
one-third is  from non-resident fishing and  hunting licenses, 10                                                               
percent is  from rental vehicles  from tourists and 9  percent is                                                               
from corporate  income tax.  A majority of  the money  comes from                                                               
the portion  that he  allocated from the  Sport Fish  Division in                                                               
ADF&G and Tourism Marketing in the DCCED.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:59:07 PM                                                                                                                    
For a sense  of their economic assumptions,  the operating budget                                                               
was  built  on a  commensurate  proportion  of services  used  by                                                               
outsiders: about  20 percent  of the state  parks budget  is from                                                               
outsiders, 43 percent  of sport fishing anglers days  are done by                                                               
tourists,   and  their   operating  budgets   for  tourism   were                                                               
calculated accordingly.  For the  capital budget in  a three-year                                                               
period they  looked at  110 projects which  were in  part tourism                                                               
related and  allocated a portion  of the projects to  tourism and                                                               
that amounts to roughly $20 million a year.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Municipal  revenues: $13  million is  from the  cruise ship  tax,                                                               
local  sales tax  and bed  tax; dockage  and moorage  revenue are                                                               
mostly Juneau and  Ketchikan fees on cruise ships.  They used the                                                               
same caveats  because the economic  assumptions for  tourism have                                                               
some  overlap  with  expenditures  that  benefit  residents.  The                                                               
averages for a bear hunt aren't the  same as for a cruise ship or                                                               
a  fishing  lodge.  The  costs  the state  spends  for  each  are                                                               
different, but there  are also some revenues  they didn't include                                                               
like from  the Railroad ($1  million from  out-of-state visitors)                                                               
for the same reason they didn't  include it in mining. It doesn't                                                               
come to the legislature and they don't know what the cost is.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
5:01:30 PM                                                                                                                    
The Marine Highway was a  little confusing, because it gets about                                                               
$20 million  in revenue  from outsiders,  but the  Marine Highway                                                               
loses enough money  in general in providing its  services that if                                                               
it had  less tourists,  and therefore ran  less ships,  the state                                                               
might  actually save  money. So,  previous studies  that included                                                               
the Marine Highway as a net cost seemed too weird.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STEDMAN  said he  didn't want people  of Alaska  to think                                                               
that the way to  get out of this hole is to  shut down the Marine                                                               
Highway and the  more vessels they tie up the  shallower the hole                                                               
is.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LOEFFLER apologized  for any  implications that  he sent  in                                                               
that direction.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
5:02:10 PM                                                                                                                    
He  said their  overall conclusions  are that  tourism brings  in                                                               
more than the  state expends in operating  moneyFiscal Effects of                                                               
Commercial Fishing, Mining and Tourism,  but it gives roughly $80                                                               
million  to  the  local communities  throughout  the  state.  One                                                               
observation is  that the  mining industry  costs very  little for                                                               
the state  to manage  and a  lot less  money relative  to others.                                                               
Second,  and   this  response  goes  to   Senator  Wielechowski's                                                               
question on  percent of first  market value. The  ex-vessel value                                                               
of fishing,  the value of the  minerals and the value  of tourism                                                               
expenditures that the state gets  in revenue are relatively equal                                                               
across the board, and they all go up and down.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL asked him to explained "first market value."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER answered  that it is the value of  each item "before                                                               
processing."  For fishing  it's the  ex-vessel value;  for mining                                                               
it's the value of the minerals  before they have been smelted out                                                               
of state; for tourism the  value of tourism expenditures is used.                                                               
It's really the value of the resource that the state owns.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked for  data on  how Alaska  compares to                                                               
other states.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LOEFFLER said  he  didn't know  other  states' fisheries  or                                                               
tourism.  A  DOR  study  compared  Alaska  to  other  states  and                                                               
countries with respect to taxes and  found that Alaska was in the                                                               
middle.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO  thanked him for  all the  data and the  work he                                                               
did on this.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER  said he had  two more caveats:  one is that  any of                                                               
these revenues  pale with respect  to oil, although they  are all                                                               
very  valuable  industries  for maintaining  the  health  of  our                                                               
communities,  our   employment,  and  for  social   and  cultural                                                               
objectives.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE remarked  that  his fishermen  friends tell  him                                                               
that a King salmon  is worth more than a barrel  of oil. He asked                                                               
him to compare the benefit of the two to the Alaska treasury.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. LOEFFLER said he couldn't do that.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
5:06:05 PM                                                                                                                    
His last  caveat is that  these industries are valuable  not just                                                               
for  their  fiscal  impact  but  for  their  economic  impact  to                                                               
people's wellbeing in communities.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL commented  that it costs industry  about $53 barrel                                                               
to extract a barrel of oil and  they are being paid about $32 for                                                               
it today.  Finding no other  questions, she thanked  Mr. Loeffler                                                               
for his presentation.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
5:07:49 PM                                                                                                                    
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
The  Senate Resources  Standing Committee  was adjourned  at 5:07                                                               
p.m.                                                                                                                            

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Genetics in fisheries Pt 1 - NMFS Guyon.pdf SRES 2/1/2016 3:30:00 PM
Fisheries
Genetics in fisheries Pt 2 - ADFG Templin.pdf SRES 2/1/2016 3:30:00 PM
Fisheries
ISER Report-Fiscal Impacts-Mining-Comm Fishing-Tourism-02-01-2016.pdf SRES 2/1/2016 3:30:00 PM
Resource Development, Economy
Loeffler-Colt Sen Resc Fiscal Effects Presentat'n.pdf SRES 2/1/2016 3:30:00 PM
Resource Development-Economy