SJR 8 - PRIMARY MFG OF PUBLICLY OWNED TIMBER Number 0048 CO-CHAIRMAN HUDSON announced the first order of business was Senate Joint Resolution No. 8, urging the United States Congress to give an affirmative expression of approval to a policy authorizing the state to regulate, restrict, or prohibit the export of unprocessed logs harvested from its land and from the land of its political subdivisions and the University of Alaska. He noted that Senator Torgerson was the prime sponsor. Number 0096 MARY JACKSON, Legislative Assistant to Senator John Torgerson, presented the resolution. She said SJR 8 is the same as the previous year's SJR 37, which had passed both the House and Senate unanimously. Its premise is simple. At the present time, the State of Alaska does not have the authority to regulate, restrict or prohibit the export of its timber, which resulted from a 1984 U.S. Supreme Court ruling. In 1990, the U.S. Congress had corrected in part that ruling for 11 western states, but that did not include Alaska. Ms. Jackson said SJR 8 requests the congressional delegation to look at that issue again, reopen it and add Alaska to it, so that Alaska can also regulate, restrict or prohibit its timber resources. MS. JACKSON said SJR 8 applied to more than just Senator Torgerson's district. The issue had also been raised in Seward, where the mill had been shut down. Those logs were being exported, in one case to another western state that did not even allow its own logs to be exported to Alaska. Ms. Jackson indicated SJR 8 would allow some economic development. She expressed hope that the congressional delegation would listen and take action on it. Number 0259 REPRESENTATIVE REGGIE JOULE asked where the logs would be processed and whether Alaska had the facilities to process them. MS. JACKSON replied, "The premise is that you would have the ability to restrict or prohibit or regulate. There may be some areas in Alaska where you want to restrict it. And there may be some where you just want to regulate it. Obviously, the ones where you'd want to regulate it are ones where you'd have the ability to process. The problem and the point right now is we don't have any of that authority, and this asks Congress to give Alaska that authority." CO-CHAIRMAN SCOTT OGAN commented that in light of severe cutbacks of timber harvest, especially in the Tongass National Forest, the least they could do was allow value-added primary manufacturing. Number 0378 REPRESENTATIVE JOE GREEN made a motion to move SJR 8 from the committee with individual recommendations. There being no objection, SJR 8 moved from the House Resources Standing Committee.