Number 240  SB 131 ANNUAL SCHOOL TAX  CHAIRMAN MACKIE introduced SB 131 as the next order of business. ROBERT NELSON , staff to Senator Al Adams, who is the prime sponsor of SB 131, explained the legislation imposes a school tax of $25 a year on persons 19 years of age and older, both employed and self- employed, resident and non-residents alike. The revenue collected from this annual tax would go into the general fund with the intent of the dollars going towards the School Construction Grant Fund and the Major Maintenance Grant Fund. Mr. Nelson said there is a definite need for the funding of school maintenance throughout Alaska, and with the state's decline in revenues and budget cut-backs, SB 131 would allow an alternative means of funding for Alaskan schools. Mr. Nelson noted that during 1995 the total number of people 19 and older in the work force was about 254,000, and with a $25 per person annual school tax, the state would stand to raise approximately $6.3 million in revenue. Included in these figures are the non-wage earners which comprise about 23 percent of total wage and salary workers in Alaska. The state could stand to gain approximately $2 million from the passage of SB 131 from non- resident workers alike. Number 280 DEBORAH VOGT , Deputy Commissioner, Department of Revenue, said the fiscal note prepared by the department is based on the idea that the Department of Revenue would directly enforce the tax against self-employed people, and that the tax would be collected and remitted to the general fund from employed people by the Department of Labor in conjunction with the unemployment tax. For that reason, the Department of Revenue fiscal note only shows $1.5 in income. The Department of Labor has estimated that the collections it would collect would be about $8.7 million. She noted the Department of Labor has estimated there are approximately 350,000 employees in the state. Ms. Vogt pointed out that the Long Range Fiscal Planning Commission considered reinstating the school tax as one of the tools for closing the revenue gap, but it was not adopted as a recommendation. Number 310 CHAIRMAN MACKIE inquired when the previous school tax was eliminated. SENATOR PHILLIPS advised that the school tax was repealed in 1980 for the same reason the state income tax was repealed, which was because the state had a lot of money coming in from oil revenues. SENATOR WILKEN stated that when running for the Senate, he pledged in his campaign that he wouldn't support any new taxes on Alaska residents so he would be opposing SB 131. Number 336 Following brief discussion by committee members, CHAIRMAN MACKIE stated SB 131 would be held in committee because it didn't appear that there were the votes to move it out.