SENATE BILL NO. 392 "An Act relating to the expenses of investigation, hearing, or public advocacy before the Regulatory Commission of Alaska, to calculation of the regulatory cost charge for public utilities and pipeline carriers to include the Department of Law's costs of its public advocacy function, to inspection of certain books and records by the attorney general when participating as a party in a matter before the Regulatory Commission of Alaska; and providing for an effective date." This was the first hearing for this bill in the Senate Finance Committee. Co-Chair Wilken stated this bill, sponsored by the Senate Labor and Commerce Committee, "clarifies that the general cost of public advocacy for utility and pipeline matters before the RCA (Regulatory Commission of Alaska) would be paid by receipts from the regulatory cost charge and not from the general fund." JANE ALBERT, staff to Senator Bunde, presented the bill. The previous year the legislature passed Executive Order #111, which transferred the public advocacy responsibility regarding utility matters from the Regulatory Commission of Alaska to the Office of the Attorney General within the Department of Law. She continued to testify as follows. [Note: in this paragraph the references to the Department of Labor are intended to refer to the Department of Law.] This bill, SB 392, is a follow-up bill that provides the Department of Labor reasonable access to records, and clarifies regulatory cost charges, and not the general fund, will continue to pay for the costs relating to providing these public advocacy services. SB 392 also adjusts the regulatory cost charge ceiling, giving the RCA and Department of Labor separate and fixed percentages of total cost charge receipts under the adjusted ceiling. And a final item for SB 392 is that it exempts State agencies from paying the allocated costs of RCA proceedings when it is in an involved party. And that is the basic introduction, and that is pretty much what I think Senator Bunde would have done in introducing this bill, and we have Daniel Patrick O'Tierney from the Department of Law available for specifics. DANIEL PATRICK O'TIERNEY, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Commercial/Fair Business Section, Civil Division, Department of Law, testified that this bill is a completion of the intent expressed in Executive Order #111. Specifically, this legislation clarifies the authority given the RCA in Executive Order #111, and provides independence between the RCA and the public advocate. The fiscal notes are based upon regulatory cost charge receipts, and not general funds. The Department of Law, the industry, consumer groups, and the RCA have all worked to produce this legislation. He continued to testify as follows. The benefits of this bill are that it completes the consolidation of public advocacy within the Department of Law. It gives this function budgetary independence from the RCA. It provides the Department of Law qualified access to utility records for economical investigation, and it eliminates the inefficiency involved with one establishment cost allocating another in proceedings before the RCA. Co-Chair Wilken asked if any other State regulatory agency employs similar procedures or whether this legislation would implement a new process. Mr. O'Tierney responded that Executive Order #111 implemented the transfer of authority between the RCA and the Department of Law. Prior to the Executive Order #111 public advocacy had been performed by a subset of the Regulatory Commission of Alaska. The industry indicated little confidence in the integrity of the past approach. In at least one-third of states public advocacy is the responsibility of the Department of Law. PAT LUBY, Advocacy Director, American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), Alaska, testified that the AARP strongly supports this legislation and recommends a yes vote. Senator Dyson offered a motion to report the bill from Committee with individual recommendations and new fiscal note. Without objection SB 392 MOVED from Committee with a new fiscal note of $300,000 dated 4/22/04 from the Department of Law. AT EASE 3:17 PM / 3:17 PM