SJR 17 NO ALASKA CHRISTMAS TREES FOR FED CAPITAL  MR. JOE AMBROSE , staff to Senator Taylor, sponsor of SJR 17, read the following sponsor statement into the record. SJR 17 was introduced to call national attention to the callousness of the Clinton Administration in asking the people of Southeast Alaska to provide Christmas trees from the Tongass National Forest to decorate the federal capital. This resolution recognizes that what would normally be an honor is instead an affront to the working people of Southern Southeast, thousands of whom have been made jobless by the anti-timber policies of the Clinton Administration. To further compound this insult, the Clinton/Gore Administration is asking school kids, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, timber-dependent communities and their elected leaders to pay the cost of participating in what can only be termed an insensitive farce. This is the same administration that ignored the efforts of the Alaska congressional delegation and the Alaska State Legislature to protect the livelihoods of the workers, families and towns of the Tongass. This is the same administration whose policies led to the closure of the region's two pulp mills and largest saw mill, costing thousands of jobs. The three US Forest Service supervisors of the Tongass National Forest say the opportunity to provide trees to decorate the nation's capitol is "a great moment for Alaska." SJR 17 makes it clear the Twentieth Alaska State Legislature considers this "opportunity" to be insensitive, callous and insulting. It calls upon President Clinton and Vice President Gore to find another source for its 1998 Christmas decorations. Number 051 CHAIRMAN TAYLOR noted the federal legislation that resulted in the Ketchikan Pulp Corporation (KPC) closure, as well as the Sitka pulp mill and Wrangell sawmill, contained two options; one allowed a modest amount of logging to continue. President Clinton chose the other option which prevents families from continuing to work in the timber industry, and by doing so, expended $110 million of taxpayer dollars sent to Southeast Alaska in the form of economic disaster relief. Since SJR 17 was filed, the U.S. Government has settled the KPC's claim for wrongful breach of the 50-year contract for $140 million, $25 million in timber stumpage credits, and $5 million in additional credits; therefore the total cost of the closure, caused by the Clinton Administration has been $280 million. Another pending lawsuit out of Sitka may cost U.S. taxpayers $500 million. None of that money will benefit the timber-dependent families who lost their jobs. Chair Taylor noted a similar resolution passed the House that morning by a vote of 34 to 5. CHAIRMAN TAYLOR noted Senator Ellis' arrival. Number 110 SENATOR MILLER moved SJR 17 out of committee with individual recommendations. There being no objection, the motion carried.