SENATOR KELLY announced SB 358 (ELIMINATE SOME STATE MULTIMEMBER BODIES) to be up for consideration. KRISTI LEAF said this is basically a government efficiency bill. It deletes 8 boards that are no longer funded and haven't been active for a number of years. TAPE 94-29, SIDE B SENATOR RIEGER said he is concerned with occupational licensing boards that exist to perpetuate a closed shop more than enforce high standards for members of their profession. MS. LEAF agreed with that position. SENATOR SALO asked if this would apply to new people, not the existing Board. An unidentified speaker explained that the Board is composed of 3 members, one a staff member. There is a hearing officer and 2 lay Board members - one from industry and one from labor. When the full Board meets it's an 11 member Board, including the Commissioner of Labor. SENATOR SALO asked if the backlog in hearings would be helped by section 7. The speaker said they saw this as broadening the pool. A panel still has to meet to hear the case, whether they draw from a 10 or 8 member pool wouldn't increase the cost. They would just improve the availability of members. SENATOR RIEGER asked if section 14 applied to labor relations. JAN DEYOUNG, Alaska Labor Relations Association, said it did apply to the Railroad and they do have right to strike. Section 14, regarding binding arbitration, is in law because the railroad employees should be eligible to strike must exhaust any agency requirement of arbitration. At the conclusion of the mediation, if they are deadlocked, the workers may strike. The Railroad may go to court to seek an injunction to bring them back. The cost of doing that is binding interest arbitration. This is where the possibility of an arbitrator becomes important. What this bill does to section 14, Ms. DeYoung said, is remove the requirement that the individual that served as the mediator before the strike also serve as the arbitrator in the later binding interest arbitration. The reason for this change is to permit the Railroad to use the federal mediation facilitation service which provides trained labor mediators at no cost. But it does not allow the mediators to serve as arbitrators. SENATOR RIEGER asked if this phase is required by federal law or is it at the discretion of the state. MS. DEYOUNG said these are the procedures that the state adopted. SENATOR RIEGER said he has not been very happy with any binding arbitration awards he has seen. He did not want to perpetuate them without cleaning them up. SENATOR SHARP moved to pass CSSB 358 (STA) from committee with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered.