HSTA - 03/21/95 Number 596 REPRESENTATIVE ROBINSON expressed that she did not know Mr. Boutin was involved in HB 121, which related to the salvage sales, but she heard people say it was that part of the forest they wanted to get their hands on. She was curious about how the two bills meshed together, and if HB 121 would assist them. She wondered also if it would help smaller operations. MR. BOUTIN said how they mesh together is in exempting salvage sales from the five-year harvest schedule. HB 121 does that, and it requires a written finding, which makes it superior to HB 212, in his opinion. According to the testimony they heard, people on the Kenai have businesses with one and two employees and they have problems getting logs when there is more wood moving on the Kenai than ever before. The Division of Forestry and the University together sold 25 million board feet in 1995. That is enough wood for the Seward mill for a year. Dollars talk, he said, so if anybody has the money to pay, the wood is there. One thing the public process does, because of the forest land use plan, is that it forces larger sales than we might otherwise have. It makes smaller sales less cost effective.