HB 80-LEGAL HOURS FOR SALE OF ALCOHOL Number 1280 CHAIR MURKOWSKI announced that the committee would next consider HOUSE BILL NO. 80, "An Act relating to the hours during which sale of alcohol and entry on licensed premises is allowed; and providing for an effective date." Number 1261 DAVID STANCLIFF, Staff to Representative Scott Ogan, Alaska State Legislature, presented HB 80 on behalf of the sponsor. He said there had been discussion about making the hours in the bill compatible with those at the Municipality of Anchorage and other municipalities statewide to avoid a conflict. There was a proposed committee substitute ("CS") drafted to accomplish this. Number 1190 REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO made a motion to adopt the proposed CS for HB 80, 22-LS0290\C, Ford, 3/8/01, as the work draft. Without opposition, it was adopted as the work draft. MR. STANCLIFF said there is a lot of pressure on the legislature to address some of the problems that come from alcohol. There are eight measures that have been introduced [this session]. He said Representative Ogan feels that it is wise to address and prevent problems with more programs and higher taxes. House Bill 80 is an effort to achieve that by standardizing bar hours throughout the state. Most of the major municipalities have done this, and it has been done nationally. It works, he said. Number 1127 MR. STANCLIFF explained that when bars start closing at a reasonable hour, there is a reduction in the problems that occur, especially on our highways and in bar altercations. Presently, the Matanuska-Susitna Borough ("Mat-Su"), parts of the Kenai [Borough], and some of the unorganized areas of the state still have the ability to stay open until 5 a.m. The legislature in the past has established hours of closure between 5 [a.m.] and 8 a.m. In the proposed CS, it suggests closing [bars] at 2 a.m. during the week, and 3 a.m. on the weekends. MR. STANCLIFF said Representative Ogan's research in riding with the troopers, talking to law enforcement officers, and [expressed] in a letter from the Alaska Peace Officers Association unanimously supports this legislation. Driving while intoxicated (DWI) and problems with the abuse of alcohol increase as the hours grow later. MR. STANCLIFF commented that in the Mat-Su, where [bars are] open until 5 [a.m.], there is the temptation for people to migrate from Anchorage to the Mat-Su and drink until closure, and then head back home. He recalled a recent collision in which one driver was heading home from a local bar and collided with another driver; they both happened to be drunk, and one driver was actually in the northbound lane heading south at about 5 a.m. MR. STANCLIFF explained that the City of Seward has closure hours that are pretty close to 2 a.m. A bar just over that line can stay open [later] and people are encouraged or persuaded to go there. MR. STANCLIFF said Representative Ogan hopes this bill will be one that can be considered, and that he had tried to hit an hour range that is in line with what most of the other municipal areas have done. He mentioned that there are a number of places around the state that are "dry" and don't sell alcohol in public at all. Representative Ogan wanted to "throw [it] out there," he said, and have the committee consider if it wouldn't be a step in the right direction to try and alleviate some of the problems so the industry and public don't continue to suffer. Number 0937 REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO asked if Representative Ogan thinks [this bill] is in lieu of doing alcohol taxation and so forth, and that simply changing the hours that alcohol is served is going to solve the problem in this state. MR. STANCLIFF responded in the negative, saying that [Representative Ogan] realizes that this is going to be an undertaking involving more than just this measure. He relayed that Representative Ogan believes that this is something that has worked in other places, that most of the state has adopted it, that it is good policy, and that it makes sense to have a standardized system throughout the state. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO commented that this is a "good first step," and mentioned some recent alcohol-related accidents. He pointed out that in going through some of the high-profile DWI [cases], they didn't happen at 2 or 3 in the morning, they happened between 6 and 10 at night. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO said he was a little concerned about the sponsor statement where it says, "The industry needs to support this bill or risk more stringent measures." He added that [the state] needs more stringent measures than just changing the bar hours. MR. STANCLIFF said he thought Representative Ogan would agree with that statement; however, Representative Ogan feels that doing things that have a positive outcome all add up in time to less reactive measures that can occur. He said Representative Ogan had stated his bottom line [since he was not present], which Mr. Stancliff put in writing. It read: "I will listen to all of the reasons why 18 hours of public drinking time is not enough, and what good reasons there are to have bars open later than 2 a.m. If I am persuaded, I will reconsider this bill." Number 0774 REPRESENTATIVE MEYER asked Mr. Stancliff to confirm that Representative Ogan also represents the Wasilla area. MR. STANCLIFF responded that he represents a small portion. REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said he admires [Representative Ogan's] courage. He pointed out that there was a letter from the Wasilla City Council [in the packet] opposing the legislation. He said [the council's] argument is that it should be a local decision, not made by the state. MR. STANCLIFF responded that Representative Ogan understands and is a big supporter of local control; however, when a person is inebriated, he or she doesn't confine the problem to the local area. The local areas collect the revenue but don't share all of the expenses caused [by that person], such as [added expenses to] state troopers, state social workers, and so forth. Representative Ogan feels that even though that is a strong and persuasive argument, the costs are statewide. Number 0655 REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said [the Wasilla City Council] opposed his own bill that dealt with the distance between bars and churches. He said he supports this initiative and that these [proposed] hours are plenty for being open. He noted that Anchorage's bars open at 10 a.m. and that the bill has [the bars] opening at 8 a.m., which he said seems early. He asked if that was a compromise, because other communities open at 8 a.m. MR. STANCLIFF replied that the opening hour wasn't considered [in the bill]. It is 8 a.m., he said, and communities can elect to open later. REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said the Anchorage Assembly had "tinkered" with the hours, and what the assembly ended up doing was to put a restriction on the bars that ignored the 3 a.m. closing time. The [penalized bars] would then have to close at 12 a.m. or 1 a.m. as a penalty. The assembly thought about making the hour 12 a.m., but when Anchorage went from 5 a.m. to 3 a.m., there was a "rash" of after-hours clubs opening up. He explained that these cause a lot of expense and other problems, maybe worse than the bars staying open until 5 a.m., because of the illegal activities going on such as gambling and prostitution. He said Anchorage still has that problem, but the assembly was afraid that by going to 12 a.m., it would just become more of a problem. He asked if that was considered. Number 0540 MR. STANCLIFF said it was discussed and it crops up when hours become fewer. It is a judgment call as to when those hours are set; if they are set too early, it exacerbates the problem, which is why Representative Ogan looked at matching up with Anchorage's hours. This is a more comfortable standard than what he had originally suggested. REPRESENTATIVE KOTT commented that he thinks this is a local- option issue to some extent. He said he doesn't think it will make much of a difference, no matter when bars are open and closed. If one is trying to stop problems on the road, he suggested dropping [the blood alcohol concentration limit] to .04 and being tough on the bar owners. He said these people shouldn't be drinking in Anchorage and then going out to Wasilla and drinking, because the bar owners are to ensure that bar staff do not serve anybody that looks inebriated, and it is against the law. He said he doesn't think changing the bar hours would address the problem, although it might be a small step in the right direction. Number 0384 MR. STANCLIFF replied that there is a lot of debate around this issue and Representative Ogan feels, based on what he has learned from law enforcement people and others, that this is an incremental step in the right direction. If one or two lives are saved, does that make it worth a sweeping policy decision "down here," he asked. If people soul-search a little, they would probably respond that it is reasonable. This is a tool that the committee will have if the bill is kept active and moves along, he added. Number 0267 REPRESENTATIVE KOTT asked if there was research or statistical data available that reflects how many of [Alaska's] fatalities due to alcohol have occurred between 3 and 5 in the morning. He said he didn't know if this is really the problem drinking time when fatalities occur. MR. STANCLIFF responded that he didn't have hard data to present today; however, if the committee wanted to see that type of data, [his office] would try to obtain it. The fact that there are fewer cars on the highway probably means that a person can weave around a bit more and get away with it. He said the peace officers that he spoke with on the Kenai Peninsula, and the ones that Representative Ogan spoke with, said that after 2 a.m., if [the officers] elect to pull someone over that has come out of a bar, there is high likelihood that a DWI will result; it is much more likely than at 10 p.m. or midnight. He said the people staying after 2 a.m., quite often, are there for the wrong reasons. Number 0032 REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO said Alaska has a tremendous problem with alcohol, so our numbers might "pale" in comparison with other states'. He asked if Mr. Stancliff had looked at other states, and what the most conservative bar-operating hours were. MR. STANCLIFF responded that he didn't know, but that he did know that there were some states, Utah being one of them ... [ends mid-speech due to tape change]. TAPE 01-33, SIDE A REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO asked if Representative Ogan would be amenable to changes, because he thinks opening a bar at 8 a.m. is too early. MR. STANCLIFF replied that Representative Ogan is not trying to penalize the industry, those that serve alcohol responsibly, or those that drink responsibly. He said a number of the municipalities [open] later than 8 a.m., so the sponsor would consider it, if it were the committee's desire. Number 0117 MIKE LOHMAN, Owner, Wasilla Bar, via teleconference, said in 1996 the City of Wasilla and City of Palmer went through a similar proposal. He said a problem must first be defined to propose a new law. He said his awareness came from the newspaper article addressing DWI and the people coming from Anchorage to the [Mat-Su] valley to drink. He wrote to Representative Ogan and to some Senators addressing his concerns on January 29 [2001]. Number 0185 MR. LOHMAN remarked that on February 27, he sent a petition to Representative Ogan with over 1,500 signatures supporting his letter of opposition. Today, he has another 500 signatures of opposition to send. He hasn't heard back from Representative Ogan, but had heard from Representative Beverly [Masek] and Senator Rick Halford. MR. LOHMAN said he was upset that Representative Ogan would make such a proposal without talking to the liquor establishments, the city council, the assembly, or the police chief in the valley for input. Statements of generality without specifics cause people to react with good intentions, but with poor results, he remarked. MR. LOHMAN explained that DWIs have been reduced from the 1996 study due to "our" efforts with good working relationships between the city, police department, bar owners, cab services, and the community itself. As long as alcohol is available, DWIs will occur to some degree. Most alcohol-related accidents are caused by repeat offenders who will drive no matter what the bar hours are. MR. LOHMAN remarked that he had heard of DWI convictions as high as 12 [for one person. He asked: How can this be? And would closing bars at 2 a.m. change this? He said there is a problem with the system, and it isn't that the bars are open after 2 a.m. Information gathered in 1996 from the retired captain of the vice division of the Alaska Police Department (APD) show that DWIs don't change relative to bar hours, but are a measure of enforcement. Mr. Loman said he had some disagreements with what Representative Ogan found, from the people he had spoken with. Number 0330 MR. LOHMAN said restricting hours creates new problems. After- hours clubs appear, and there are quite a few in Anchorage. Such establishments give away liquor, and there are gambling, drugs, and prostitution. There are rumors of an upcoming club in Wasilla, just due to the fact that the paper reported that there is a bill being proposed to reduce [bar] operation hours. MR. LOHMAN asked an officer that he knows quite well why these clubs are not shut down; the officer said it is very difficult, there is so much red tape, and even when they are [shut down], it is strictly a misdemeanor and [after-hour club owners] can open up the next day. As long as there isn't a major complaint, the police essentially leave them alone. MR. LOHMAN pointed out that no one takes responsibility for the amount of alcohol consumed at house parties, at after-hours clubs, or in parking lots. Isn't it better to have responsible bar owners, he asked, and if [bar owners] aren't, then deal with them, don't make across-the-board laws that have negative consequences. He said closing at 2 a.m. in Wasilla would create cab shortage problems. In his bar at 2 a.m. there are approximately 200 customers; the police will not be able to keep up with a mass exodus. Number 0423 MR. LOHMAN reminded the committee that those people are going to want to "slam down" their last drinks just before last call at 2 a.m. When this happens, [patrons] will not always be drunk as they walk out the door, but within five to ten minutes they will be. Drinking after hours in non-controlled environments will definitely increase, he said. Closing at 5 a.m. provides a wind-down period. There are cabs, and the police can keep up with what is actually occurring; the bar owners can handle what they have to control, which is around 20 to 50 customers at 4:30 a.m. MR. LOHMAN said there is also the "people's rights issue." He said he heard some people laughing when it was commented that people would be in a bar after 2 a.m. He said "we" don't all work 40 hours a week from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and people work swing and graveyard shifts. To tell those people that they can't stop in the bar and have a drink after 2 a.m. is what he characterized as "socialistic at best." As long as [a person] doesn't hurt someone else, and is responsible for what he or she does, there is no reason why he or she can't have a drink; if that person causes a problem, he or she should be dealt with. MR. LOHMAN emphasized that "we" don't need to change the law, "we" need to address the offenders so they can't hurt someone else. It would be too easy for us to reduce bar hours across the state and turn our heads from the real problem of abuse, at any hour. He urged the committee to leave the decision of bar hour closure to local government. He volunteered to work on a committee to evaluate problems associated with DWIs. MR. LOHMAN stated that he wouldn't be opposed to a mandatory blood-alcohol-limit test for every customer who was planning on driving. He offered to send the committee the letter he had sent to Representative Ogan, with or without the petitions. There were other people who wanted to testify today, he relayed, but they didn't have time. He commented that he found out today that the committee could be addressed through written testimony. Number 0668 REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO asked Mr. Lohman where the 1,500 signatures on the petition came from. MR. LOHMAN said it started at his bar and went all over the valley to different places. He verified that some people drinking in his bar were asked to sign the petition. When asked if he supports an increase in the alcohol tax, he responded affirmatively; however, the numbers look "a little abusive possibly," he commented. And, when asked if he supports the efforts of communities to have jurisdiction to raise their own individual alcohol taxes, he responded affirmatively. Number 0732 MR. LOHMAN explained that he would like to see local governments be able to handle this. He isn't against controlling drunk driving, and would support any type of legislation to stop it. He pointed out that there had been some high-profile cases that occurred, and [the accidents] did not occur between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. He said there have been some general comments made, which upset him, that people leave the valley at 5 a.m. and head to Anchorage, and there are so many drunk drivers that people are afraid to drive. He said if that were the case, the state patrol would be out there with roadblocks catching those people, because they are a "cash cow for the State of Alaska." MR. LOHMAN reminded the committee that when people come from Anchorage to drink in the [Mat-Su] valley, they forget that there are more people going from the valley to Anchorage for concerts, sporting events, and nightclubs. Number 0799 REPRESENTATIVE KOTT stated that he was the one who made the comments earlier that Mr. Lohman was referring to. He asked Mr. Lohman if there is an impetus within the industry to create a different level of fine for those bar owners who exceed their authority in providing alcohol to patrons. MR. LOHMAN responded affirmatively and said he wouldn't have a problem with that. He reiterated his earlier comment that bar staff shouldn't be allowing people to drive when they are intoxicated. He emphasized that [there is a misconception] that those driving intoxicated are all coming from a bar, but they are missing the point. He owns the Wasilla Bar and goes out at 5 a.m. with a garbage can and picks up alcohol containers from the parking lot that people throw out [car] windows. Those don't come out of the bar, he said, and once bars are closed at 2 a.m., people are going to be anywhere they can stop and party. He said the assumption couldn't be made that all drunk drivers come from a bar. REPRESENTATIVE KOTT said he is not making that assumption, and that the bar owners he knows are responsible and have an idea of how much individuals drink at their bar. Number 0939 MR. LOHMAN explained that [bar owners] have very stringent requirements. He couldn't say that no one has ever left intoxicated because the criteria [bar owners] are given are not black and white; people can't be forced to take a breathalyzer test, yet, if something like this were mandatory, it would "take the monkey off our back." He said "we" have to make certain that people who leave the bar can walk straight, don't have slurred words, and can look straight ahead with their eyes. MR. LOHMAN said his bar turns away people, and he has a videotape to monitor what is going on. The people leaving his establishment had better be able to pass the test. His bar has an evening bar check during which the police officers come in; [his bar] also calls them if there is a "situation." He said the police have been dispatched for support, and they work closely together. Number 1026 MR. LOHMAN, responding to a question about the number of patrons in his bar between 4:30 and 5 a.m., said it is between 20 and 50 [people]. On certain occasions like New Year's Eve, there probably are 200. He pointed out that in Wasilla there was not one DWI on New Year's Eve, and normally there are 20 to 50. REPRESENTATIVE HAYES asked if the [Wasilla] community has ever voted on reducing the bar hours. He also asked how long local officials are elected for. This is a local-control issue, he said, and his community voted on it. [Fairbanks's] bars were reduced to a 3:30 a.m. [closure time]; he said he didn't agree with that and doesn't agree with this. MR. LOHMAN replied that [elected officials] are elected every three years. It was voted on in 1996 in Wasilla by the city council and was never up for a community vote. Number 1140 JOAN DIAMOND, Public Health Representative, via teleconference, said she has been employed for 21 years in public health. She spoke in strong support of the bill; she is familiar with the data that comes from Anchorage in particular, and agrees with what Representative Ogan brought forth regarding the problems that occur when one bar or package store closes and another one stays open later. Number 1186 MS. DIAMOND said the information from Nome and Fairbanks indicates that this is not just a Southcentral problem, but is much bigger. The other important piece, she emphasized, is that the legislature is responsible for protecting the public's best interest; the responsibility is to the public and to the public roadways, including decreasing the drinking-and-driving disabilities. MS. DIAMOND referred to when the bar hours were reduced in Anchorage, and said there was a substantial difference from the emergency room [perspective], where she was a nurse at that time. Number 1256 REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO mentioned that Ms. Diamond had done some fairly substantial work on alcohol and its effects on the community. He asked if there had been any studies done on the migration of those out drinking. MS. DIAMOND responded that she didn't have any at her disposal. MARTI GREESON, Executive Director, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), via teleconference, thanked Representative Ogan for introducing a very common-sense bill. Over the past five years, she said, Alaska has ranked no less than third-highest in our nation for the percentage of traffic deaths caused by alcohol. MS. GREESON said this is one piece of action that needs to be taken to make a difference in the devastation that is being wreaked upon [Alaska]. Locally and nationally, MADD advocates setting uniform statewide cutoff limits on the sale of alcohol beverages in order to end the practice of bar-hopping to find establishments closing later, in order to have one more drink, with the likelihood of impaired driving as a result. Number 1349 MS. GREESON remarked that the 8 a.m. opening hour indicates to her that there is a problem around alcohol and that, sadly, [Alaska] has a lot of individuals who are not responsible with alcohol consumption and [subsequent] behavior. She said she is in support of standardized hours. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO referred to the fiscal note and said [this legislation] would have a fiscal effect on the ABC Board and on the officers that go out and patrol. He asked Mr. Griffin, since there is a zero fiscal note, what the actual fiscal note could be. DOUG GRIFFIN, Director, Alcohol Beverage Control Board (ABC Board), via teleconference, said it is a question of the level of enforcement. [The ABC Board] put a zero fiscal note on there because "we" are spread so thin now that having shorter bar hours wouldn't really make a difference. "We" could do a little more enforcement in [bar] hours, he said, which the language [in the fiscal note] alluded to. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO referred to Mr. Lohman's testimony about the gray area regarding regulations and standards that apply to servers. He asked if there is the possibility of clearing up some of those regulations and making the server-training more effective if this bill doesn't go anywhere. REPRESENTATIVE ROKEBERG indicated that there is a Techniques of Alcohol Management (TAM) bill [coming up]. Number 1504 MR. GRIFFIN replied that the standard is different and the law talks about not serving a "drunken person." [Bar staff] go by physical signs, and this is not the same as a .10 or .08 or some kind of blood-alcohol [test], because a server in a bar doesn't have sophisticated equipment to measure blood alcohol. The visual signs are taught in the [TAM] training, but it is a different standard from what is used for driving under the influence. He said not everyone in a bar drinking is going to drive, so service people take that into account, knowing that a person has another way home, a designated driver, and so forth. Determining whether someone is drunk is somewhat subjective. MR. GRIFFIN stated that alcohol training is good and he thinks it can be improved; it has made a difference and can be worked on to get people thinking of a bar as a social setting rather than a place where a legal drug is dispensed. He said "we" are going to start, as violations happen for "over-service" and service to underage people, tracking the type of training that the person involved with the infraction had so "we" can start having some standards and accountability for the training out there. He said "we" are going to start looking at the quality of alcohol-server-training programs. Number 1664 MR. GRIFFIN, responding to a question about the number of investigators in the Anchorage area, answered two. He said less than half of a position is dedicated to making sure that bars close at the appropriate time. He said "we" don't spend a lot of time doing it; much of the enforcement is reactive, based on a complaint. He said "we" rely on the Anchorage Police Department to do that type of legwork. MR. GRIFFIN, when asked if a bar owner can serve more than one drink at a time, responded that he or she can serve two, or a double, or a mixed drink that has two shots in it. CINDY CASHEN, Member, Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) Juneau Chapter, said she is also a victim of drunk driving. On April 19, her father Ladd Macauley, and Martin Richards were killed on the Kenai highway. She thanked Representative Ogan's office for introducing the bill, and said [MADD] in Anchorage endorses the bill. MS. CASHEN said she, too, would like to see a local municipality be able to do this; however, they haven't and aren't going to do this. She said in representing the victims across Alaska, those who can no longer speak because they have been killed by a drunk driver, and as a victim who lost a family member and loved one, she would like to see the legislature "step up to the plate" and say this isn't right and "we" are going to protect you. She added that she is a recovering alcoholic, and when she was a practicing alcoholic, "we" went bar-hopping and drove - nothing was going to stop them. She said she has friends who are still practicing [alcoholics] and still bar-hop. They do it in Juneau when there is a bar that is open 15 minutes longer; they will stand in line in a liquor store that is open 5 minutes later, she remarked. Number 1827 MS. CASHEN said understanding the alcoholic mind is a real mystery, but a person will do anything. If that means getting in a car and driving 20 to 40 miles [for a drink], that is normal; however, to a non-alcoholic mind, that is not. That will continue to happen and lives will be lost if this bill doesn't pass. REPRESENTATIVE HAYES said he is at a loss because it sounds as if whether the bars are open till 5 a.m. or 3 a.m., Ms. Cashen's friends are still doing the same activities. He said to him, he doesn't think that the bar hours are the problem. It involves a bigger issue. He said he understands the alcoholic mind because he has some family members who are alcoholics. Number 1911 REPRESENTATIVE HAYES commented that the bars used to be open until 5 a.m. in Fairbanks, and said he had closed the bars, but was not drinking. There are other factors. The local community has officials elected to reflect the views of that local community, he pointed out, and he has a hard time taking away that local control. In Fairbanks, this issue was voted on and the bar hours were restricted to 3:30 a.m., but the community as a whole had to vote on it. MS. CASHEN agreed with Representative Hayes and said she sees his point; however, there is a big difference between the chronic drunk drinking until 5 a.m. or drinking until 2 a.m. It is less alcohol consumed, and the chances of drunk driving will go down. Mothers Against Drunk Drivers doesn't come out with public policy statements without a lot of investigation. She said she would be more than happy to provide the committee with studies to back this up. She remarked that it sounds nice being able to dance until 5 a.m., but quite a few people who are in the bars between 2 and 5 a.m. are going to try to drive home. Number 1986 CHAIR MURKOWSKI asked Ms. Cashen to provide what statistical information she has to the committee. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO asked Ms. Cashen why she feels communities haven't responded. MS. CASHEN replied that as with most issues, the bottom line is money. She surmised that [bar owners] feel that they can make more money staying open longer. REPRESENTATIVE MEYER reverted back to the discussion of the problems with after-hour clubs in Anchorage. He said they are hard to bust and people have a secret code to get in. At least in a bar there is some control before a person gets out in a car; in the after-hours clubs, no one cares. He said that was probably the main reason, when he was on the [Anchorage] Assembly, that "we" didn't change the hours even more, from 3 a.m. to 1 a.m. He asked if MADD has considered the effect that after-hours clubs could have if the bars start closing too early. Number 2092 MS. CASHEN said she knows of one [after-hours club] in Juneau, and [MADD] is planning on contacting the person to see about working with them to turn it into a good thing. She said all she sees here is a good thing, and the bottom line [of this bill] is that it will save lives. Recently there were six people hit, four of them killed, up on the Chena Highway near Fairbanks around 5 a.m. this past summer. Bar-hopping does happen, she remarked, and if this crash didn't occur because of if it, there will be [some] others. MS. CASHEN concluded by saying this bill sends a message to victims across the state. She cautioned that it would break victim's hearts again if the bill were not to pass. Number 2147 REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said he doesn't disagree with Ms. Cashen because he knows when he used to frequent the bars, as long as they were open, he was going to keep drinking. Luckily, where he lived they closed at 1 a.m. He said for the responsible drinker, this is a good law because it is going to say "you have to stop and go home." For the hard-core alcoholic, however, who drinks uncontrollably and is going to drive and hurt somebody, he isn't sure this is going to stop him or her. An alcoholic is going to go to any extreme to get [alcohol], be it from an after-hours club, a friend's house, or so forth. Number 2206 MS. CASHEN agreed and said MADD agrees. Nothing is going to stop the chronic drunk driver from drinking and driving, but "we" can do our best to prevent it. Nationally, 80 percent of the drunk drivers are first-time offenders, she said. A lot of them make this mistake, but unfortunately a lot of them still kill. "We" are not dealing with the chronic drunk driver in this situation insomuch as sending a message that drinking and driving isn't acceptable, and that bar-hopping needs to stop. REPRESENTATIVE KOTT asked if MADD has statistical research showing the number of drunk-driving-related fatalities between 3 and 5 a.m. He also asked if there is any further data available that would suggest that bar owners were prosecuted for serving that person to the extent that he or she was over the limit. He wondered if "we" are tackling the problem at the right end. He asked Ms. Cashen, if [the legislature] could pass any piece of legislation dealing with DWI, whether it would be this bill or one lowering the blood alcohol level to .04. He suggested if the goal is to get people off the road, [the blood alcohol concentration limit] should be lowered to .04 or .02 instead. Number 2276 MS. CASHEN responded that it is a small piece of the puzzle, but if it saves one life, it is worth it. She said she has seen statistics - not from MADD, but from the state - about the number of crashes occurring at certain hours across the state and on days of the week, which will back up a reason for this bill. [Alaska] is an "alcoholic state," and there is a lot of alcohol abuse going on, much of which comes out in drunk driving. She said this is done in other states, which wouldn't pass this law if it didn't [work]. Number 2330 MATT FELIX, Director, National Council Alcoholism (NCA), Juneau Chapter, said the NCA has over 200 chapters nationwide; the Juneau Chapter was established in 1964. This is his thirtieth year in the field of alcohol and drug abuse, eight of which were spent as the state division director. He said he is fairly familiar with the alcoholism situation in the state, as well as the government statutes, Title 4, and the dispensation and sale [of alcohol]. MR. FELIX explained that this is a "slice of the pie," not a "silver bullet." He said there has been talk about comparing slices and which one is the best in terms of doing something about drunk driving and alcoholism in Alaska. He said it is going to take a package of bills to solve or at least turn this problem around. He said there is data showing that the less accessible alcohol is, the fewer problems there are. MR. FELIX relayed that there is a lot of data showing that continuous drinking and having access to alcohol over a longer period of time increases the amount of felonies in a given area [such as domestic violence]. About 65 to 70 percent of the felonies in our prison system today are alcohol-related. He explained that there is a greater percentage of people in prison on alcohol-related felonies in our state than in any other. Number 2443 MR. FELIX said this is "deja vous" for him; he came to the state in the 1970s to head the department of health and social services with the city [of Juneau]. The first month he was here, at 3 a.m., a man ran into a boat on Egan Expressway and killed an individual. All four of the participants in that accident were intoxicated over the legal limit. A month later, in 1977, an individual drank to the "wee hours of the morning" and at 5 a.m. went home and shot his wife and two children. He said it started a process in Juneau of looking at heavy drinking and late bar hours, and the response over a period of three or four years was to [change] bar hours; presently, it is 1 a.m. during the week, and 3 a.m. on the weekends, he said. "We" feel that it made a great deal of difference, and the police chief, after a year of the bar hours [being reduced], moved one officer from the late-night shift to the day shift because the change had made such a difference. Number 2467 MR. FELIX pointed out that alcohol is so cheap in this state that it is ridiculous, cheaper than soda and milk by volume. He said there is a .08 [blood-alcohol limit bill] for drunk driving, and there are a lot of bills [this session]. This is wonderful seeing some response from the legislature, he remarked. TAPE 01-33, SIDE B Number 2460 MR. FELIX said he teaches a class at the university on alcohol abuse and its history in the state. In at least the first ten years of statehood, the Title 4 statutes were undermined; there are loose laws and a lack of governing of sales of dispensation. For example, there are a lot of intoxicated people being served in both bars and liquor stores. He pointed out that Ms. Cashen's father was killed by a man who staggered into a liquor store. This happens because there is no enforcement. MR. FELIX commented that the ABC Board is down to three or four statewide enforcement officers, and they don't concentrate on that part, so there is a lack of enforcement. He said in a community the size [of Juneau], where a lot of the sales tax or tax income to the local government comes from both on and off [premises] sales, Title 4 won't be aggressively enforced to restrict the sale [of alcohol]. MR. FELIX said there are a lot of things historically that promote drinking in this state or at least allow heavy drinking. Some of the bills presented this year are trying to patch those holes, and he thinks [HB 80] is just one of them. Number 2401 MR. FELIX referred to an earlier question. He stated that the only piece of data he knows about that addresses late hours is that there are "a heck of a lot more" arrests for drunk driving during those late hours in this state than in others. He said he couldn't think of any other state where drunks are running into each other and killing each other in the late hours. Statistically, it takes 200 drunk-driving occurrences to get caught once, but in this state drunk drivers are running into one another. He said he doesn't know what the statistical chances are of that happening, but it has to be into the thousands. MR. FELIX stated that bar hours are an important piece of this package, and he encouraged the committee to move [the legislation] forward. REPRESENTATIVE HAYES said it still boils down to, "Juneau made a choice, Juneau decided that 'we' have a problem in our community and as a community, your local officials dealt with it." Fairbanks voted on it as a community to deal with it. Anchorage had a problem and it was dealt with. It is not the state legislature's job to micromanage a local community, which is what local officials are elected for. Number 2334 MR. FELIX said he would agree on most issues, but not on alcohol sales and abuse issues. [Alaska] has such an outrageous situation, and the communities are small and very political. [Communities] don't have the ability to politically move this kind of legislation forward. He pointed out that Juneau had that ability, but doesn't have the political initiative to enforce Title 4, which refers to the sale and dispensation [of alcohol]. MR. FELIX explained that [Alaska] is the only state that he knows of - and he has testified before Congress on this - that abrogates this particular responsibility to local communities. It is an ABC and state obligation. At least 48 other states have realized that the potential for injury caused by alcohol sales and abuse is so important that the state took it on and backed the enforcement, and substantiated the statutes that regulate it. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO said in growing up in Alaska, alcohol is kind of part of the Alaskan "aura." He mentioned some famous Alaskan bars. He said it has been part of Alaska's brief history and culture, more of an attitude up here. He asked Mr. Felix if people feel that the effects of alcohol are just part of the Alaskan [experience]. Number 2254 MR. FELIX responded "absolutely." The frontier attitude in Alaska is one of the major factors to Alaskans' overindulgence and the consequences resulting from that. He said that attitude came and is substantiated by our lack of doing something about the problem over the years as a state. Historically, "we" made some big mistakes and are going to live with them for a number of years around this problem. When [Alaska] was a territory, the federal government issued a tremendous number of [liquor] licenses, and when [Alaska] became a state, "we" grandfathered those licenses in during the first 10 to 15 years of our history. "We" passed licenses out at a very rapid rate, and at relatively no cost. MR. FELIX said [Alaska] has an overabundance of sales and accessibility, and an extremely strong liquor lobby during the first 20 years of the state's history, keeping the price low through the lack of taxation. The four main distributors out of Seattle take hundreds of millions of dollars out of this state, selling by volume, not by cost. [Consequently, Alaska] is left with the problems. Number 2229 MR. FELIX stated that our statutes, attitudes, and mistreatment of this problem over the years have allowed it. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO commented that he believes in local control, but the state has not put enough resources behind enforcement. He referred to the ABC Board and said there are two inspectors in Anchorage and three inspectors statewide [overseeing] 1,400 liquor licenses. He asked how liquor laws in this state can be enforced if there are [only] three people tasked with doing the job. He said it is impossible. The approach needs to be comprehensive, and this [legislation] is part of the puzzle, unless the state wants to get tough and start funding additional enforcement officers. Number 2146 MR. FELIX agreed and said enforcement is prevention; when there is proper enforcement in any given area, there is a reduction in drunk driving, domestic violence, and alcohol-related felonies. There is a neutered ABC enforcement [Board] in this state, which was done over a long period of time. Without enforcement at the state level and without the political involvement of local politics, there is a situation in which if a person owns a bar or liquor store, the chances of that person getting caught for selling to underage kids are probably "nil." Therefore, a person will take that chance, because it is profitable. MR. FELIX said one of the [ABC Board] officers was finally placed in Southeast Alaska. In one night, this person went to 13 liquor stores and made 13 arrests. This says that those bars and liquor stores have been serving after hours, and serving kids for a long period of time, lacking the enforcement. Number 2066 MR. FELIX explained that the state addressed the problem a number of years ago by saying, "Well, if we're not going to fund enforcement at the state level, let's give the cities some money and ... demand that they enforce these laws." He said the wholesale liquor-license fees come to about $2 million a year and are now funneled to each incorporated municipality with the explicit purpose of enforcing Title 4. Those fees get mixed with other kinds of revenue-sharing fees, go into the city coffers, go to the police departments, and disappear. Everyone has forgotten over the years that this money was for that purpose; [the money] has become expected and is part of the local police department's budget. The obligations tied to those fees are not followed through on. MR. FELIX commented that Juneau gets $65,000 [a year], which is one full-time employee (FTE), and Anchorage gets a couple of hundred thousand [dollars], based on population. The state tried for a while to enforce this, but it undermined the ABC [Board] by lack of funding for enforcement officers. He said they then tried to "end-run" to fund local governments through revenue-sharing by funding the wholesale license fees to them; this, too, was undermined over time. REPRESENTATIVE HALCRO said it seems that when reading about crackdowns or undercover sting operations, usually the funding source is from a grant from the [U.S.] Department of Justice; it doesn't have anything to do with state and local money. Number 2019 MR. FELIX commented that "we" pay them twice for doing the same job. He urged the committee to understand that this bill is an integral part of a package; it will probably take a lot more legislation this year, and "we" can "straighten this problem out." He said [Alaska] by far has the most hideous situation around alcohol of any state, which he had testified before Congress about; he was flown back to Washington, D.C., because they couldn't understand what was happening up here. The per- capita consumption is off the chart, and the U.S. Senate Health Committee couldn't believe that a [state's population] could be drinking this much: 514 drinks for every man, woman, and child in this state a year. Alaskans drink a gallon more of pure alcohol, [per capita], than the national average. He said "we" know it's true because "we" tax it, and almost every ounce is watched. Number 1937 REPRESENTATIVE KOTT said the way the statutes are written, outside of the hours of 5 and 8 a.m., many of the communities around the state have implemented their own ordinances and restrict that even further. He said his understanding of this bill, as it relates to Juneau and Anchorage, means that it does nothing; he asked Mr. Felix if that was correct. MR. FELIX responded affirmatively. REPRESENTATIVE KOTT said as he looks through the list [on the handout], there are not too many communities that this bill really would affect. He submitted that those communities that have restricted hours of operation for serving liquor wouldn't go the other direction. He said perhaps it would be more effective to place some restriction on establishments that are not bars, for them to close earlier than bars. He said he foresees that some of the problems are with people who come out of a bar, then go to a package store and buy liquor. If those establishments were closed one hour prior to the bars, it would be a much better approach to the problem. Number 1843 MR. FELIX responded that it is a suggestion that he hadn't thought about in a while; it addresses the same problem that this bill addresses, which is the relationship between availability and the problems it presents. Most research shows that price and availability are the two major factors in per- capita consumption. He said [Alaska] has the cheapest and most available alcohol in the United States. REPRESENTATIVE KOTT said he thought [the legislature] had the same debate about price and availability during the tobacco issue, and that [Alaska] is now number three in the nation for per-capita consumption, even after the price was adjusted upwards. MR. FELIX pointed out that [Alaska] dropped 17 percent among the "price-sensitive groups, the fixed income, elderly, and the teen group," in the use of nicotine the first year after the tax [was implemented], and has stayed down in those groups. Number 1775 REPRESENTATIVE MEYER asked for clarification that the ABC Board does not have any enforcement power. MR. FELIX said, "Oh, yes." REPRESENTATIVE MEYER explained his understanding that [the ABC Board] could issue a notice of violation, but needed to have the police go with them to actually arrest somebody. He asked what the powers of the ABC Board are. Number 1758 MR. FELIX said [the powers] are outlined in Title 4, which is a set of statutes just for the regulation and dispensation of alcohol. He said [the ABC Board] is limited in actually arresting and taking someone out of the bar. REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said the Anchorage Assembly found that there were bars that would stay open past 3 [a.m.], and the ABC Board would write a notice of violation; and when the license came up for renewal every two years, "we" would see these notices of violation. He said "we" would see what the problem was and try to deal with it with the establishment rather than [enacting] a law to penalize all bars. He added that 99 percent of bars were doing the right thing. He said those that were trying to stay open past 3 a.m. would be required to close an hour earlier, which "we" found to be very effective because they were being hit in the pocketbook and it gave them an incentive to abide by the law. He said some of them actually went out of business, which is favorable because "you want the bad ones out of business, and [want to] keep the good ones in business." REPRESENTATIVE MEYER said this, then, gets back to a local issue rather than a state law. He said "we" cannot have enough ABC Board folks to deal with all of the issues. Number 1675 MR. FELIX replied that this is one of those situations in which local control sounds nice, but doesn't work. The communities that have restricted bar hours did it out of desperation, and it cost a lot of lives to get to that point. He spoke about the role that interpersonal relationships play in influencing local politics. MR. FELIX said it is not and cannot be effective locally. There are a lot of communities with licenses that are just too "tight- knit" and everybody knows everybody. Local control of a lot of things is a wonderful idea, but when there is a product that has such a potential [to cause] harm to society, then local control is not as effective as it should be, and the state needs to step in for these situations. REPRESENTATIVE HAYES asked Mr. Stancliff for information on the number of communities in the state with bar hours that will be addressed by this bill, and what the package store hours are for these communities. He said in looking at the [committee handout that shows bar closure hours], it shows that every big community but Kenai and Palmer has addressed this under local control. He asked whether all of the little communities are the problem then. MR. FELIX responded that they haven't addressed it appropriately; for example, in Fairbanks it is still 3 a.m. He mentioned a young girl who was killed driving to the high school; the driver who killed her drank until 3 a.m. He said he thought 2 a.m. would be a much more reasonable hour. He agreed with Representative Halcro that one of the improvements to the bill would be to have bars opening at 10 a.m. He said if a person is drinking at 8 and 9 a.m., with some exceptions, there is a real problem. Number 1483 REPRESENTATIVE HAYES stated that the bill says that the bars are to close at 2:30 a.m. Monday through Friday, and pointed out that Fairbanks is [already closing at] 2 a.m. [during the week], and 3:30 a.m. on the weekends. He commented that this bill says 3 a.m. to comply with Anchorage. He stated that the big picture needs to be looked at. He said if people need to leave the bar at 3 a.m., then one still runs into the same problem. MR. FELIX explained that the issue of opening bars later and closing earlier addresses the availability [of alcohol]. He said to have a really effective bill, bars and liquor stores should open at 10 a.m. and close at 2 a.m., which is what most states do. [HB 80 was held over.]