SB 34-REPEAL 90 DAY SESSION LIMIT  4:23:58 PM CHAIR KAWASAKI announced the consideration of SENATE BILL NO. 34 "An Act relating to the duration of a regular session of the legislature." 4:24:27 PM SENATOR CATHY GIESSEL, District E, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau, Alaska, sponsor of SB 34. She noted that SB 34 repeals a citizens initiative passed in 2006 and discussed the following points regarding the 90 day session limit: [Original punctuation provided.] • Passed to limit legislative sessions to 90 days to promote efficiency and cost savings. • Intended to streamline the legislative process and reduce extended sessions. • Legislature has only met the 90-day limit three times since its passage. • Two of these instances were in the early years after adoption. • The third was during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020)an exceptional circumstance. • The Legislature has frequently extended sessions beyond the 121-day constitutional limit. • More extended and special sessions raise costs rather than reducing them. • Managing natural resources, budgeting, and major policies demand thorough discussion and debate. • As budget challenges grow with inflation and lack of revenue, more discussion is needed for balancing the budget 4:26:10 PM SENATOR GIESSEL continued: • In 2020, the Legislature met for 69 days due to pandemic restrictions. • However, in 2021, the Legislature was in session for 217 days to compensate for lost time. • Demonstrates that artificial time constraints do not eliminate legislative needs. • The public expects sessions to conclude within 90 days. • The reality of extended sessions leads to public frustration. • The 90-day rule has created more confusion than efficiency. • Fails to ensure efficiency or cost savings as originally intended. • Forces unnecessary special sessions that increase legislative workload. • Complex governance requires flexibility, not rigid time constraints. 4:28:09 PM PAIGE BROWN, Staff, Senator Cathy Giessel, Alaska State Legislature, Juneau, Alaska, provided the sectional analysis for SB 34: [Original punctuation provided.] Sectional Analysis  "An Act relating to the duration of a regular session of the legislature." Section 1. Repeals AS 24.05.150(b). This sections repeals the statute requiring the legislature to adjourn from a regular session within 90 consecutive calendar days, including the day the legislature first convenes in that regular session. 4:28:47 PM CHAIR KAWASAKI opened public testimony on SB 34. 4:29:03 PM ED MARTIN, representing self, Kenai, Alaska, testified in opposition to SB 34 and stated that the main flaw in SB 34 is ignoring art. III, sec. 2, Constitution of the State of Alaska, "all political power is inherent in the people. He said the people voted for a 90-day session, and everything should be accomplished in that time period, if the focus stayed on legislative priorities like budgets, appointments, and judges, not symbolic bills. 4:31:49 PM CHAIR KAWASAKI closed public testimony on SB 34. 4:32:29 PM CHAIR KAWASAKI held SB 34 in committee.