HB 236: RELATING TO NEWSPAPER NOTICES CHAIRMAN MOSES advised members that a proposed committee substitute was before them. REPRESENTATIVE BARNES moved to adopt the committee substitute for HB 236. CSHB 236(RLS) was ADOPTED. REPRESENTATIVE ULMER asked for clarification on the 25% provision on page two. He asked, Who decides if a newspaper has 25% readership? Is the impact to expand the number of publications eligible to run foreclosure notices linked to the area where the foreclosure is taking place? BOB GOULD, PRINCIPLE OWNER, ALASKA JOURNAL OF COMMERCE, replied that the language comes from a compilation of similar statutory language in Lower 48 jurisdictions. The goal is to define a newspaper for the purpose of noticing foreclosure default sale notices. Title companies, who place such notices, often notice them in metropolitan daily's, such as the Anchorage Daily News, Juneau Empire, Nome Nugget and Fairbanks Daily News Miner, for each of the four judicial districts in Alaska. In the Lower 48 states, legal, real estate and banking newspapers also apply. The 25% editorial content provision is meant to exclude such papers such as shoppers, whose readers are not interested in foreclosure notices. The statute says that the notice is required to run in a paper nearest to the sale in the corresponding judicial district. REPRESENTATIVE BARNES asked, if a Glenallen paper, for example, did not have more than 500 readers, then it would not qualify under HB 236? MR. GOULD stated that such a paper would not qualify. REPRESENTATIVE BARNES expressed that the provision was bad; little newspapers should be able to qualify. MR. GOULD clarified that the topic of conversation was only for default notices, not public meetings, road closures, bids or proposals. Default notices now only appear by request of the title companies in the four major newspapers in each judicial district. The Aniak paper appears to be the only paper, as of 1990 figures, with less than 500 readers. Title 9 does not apply to other types of advertising done on a state level that would be affected by HB 236. He said Title 9 applies only to real estate foreclosures. REPRESENTATIVE BARNES expressed a desire to expand circulation dollars at a state level down to the smallest of newspapers in a given area. CHAIRMAN MOSES stated that if the notice was given in an isolated community, the default would not get the exposure that would be good for the market. REPRESENTATIVE G. PHILLIPS asked that the committee consider the general publication notice. REPRESENTATIVE BARNES moved to pass the committee substitute for HB 236 with individual recommendations. CSHB 236(RLS) was MOVED with INDIVIDUAL RECOMMENDATIONS. ADJOURNMENT CHAIRMAN MOSES asked members and the audience if there were further comments. Hearing none, he adjourned the meeting at 4:24 p.m.