SB 291-MUNICIPAL HARBOR FACILITY GRANTS  CHAIR BERT STEDMAN announced SB 291, version Y, to be up for consideration. 1:36:54 PM He recapped the history of harbor transfers from the state to municipalities. Since the transfers began ten years ago, there's been an ongoing debate regarding the condition under which the harbors were transferred and the amount the state paid the municipalities to assume ownership and operation of those harbors. To address the issue legislators met with municipal harbor administrators and as a result the Alaska Association of Harbormasters and Port Administrators brought forward a proposal for a 50/50 matching grant program for harbor upgrades and renovations. That would allow municipalities to use the 50 percent state match and other appropriate funds with the provision that other state grant money could not be used. SB 291 would establish the municipal harbor facility grant fund to which the Legislature would make an annual appropriation from the watercraft fuel tax account and from the state portion of the fisheries business tax. Both sources come from the marine industry so harbor users would generate the revenue for the program. The bill caps the funds that can be used per community per year at $5 million so that a large community couldn't take all the available funds in any given year. Communities could apply for the capital match for any particular harbor just once. The expectation is that communities would establish, maintain, and run an enterprise fund into perpetuity. As currently designed the program would run for between 8 and 10 years and at the end of that time the harbors around the state should be up to a fairly good standard. CHAIR STEDMAN announced that public testimony had previously been taken on SB 291 and he would like a motion to move it from committee. 1:41:15 PM SENATOR GARY STEVENS motioned to report CSSB 291(CRA), version Y, with attached fiscal note(s) and individual recommendations. There being no objection, it was so ordered.