HB 291-LICENSING OF RESIDENTIAL CONTRACTORS    CHAIRMAN BEN STEVENS called the Senate Labor & Commerce Committee meeting to order at 1:40 p.m. and announced HB 291 to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE KEVIN MEYER, sponsor of HB 291, said under current law a person must apply for a residential contractor endorsement within six months of successfully completing the exam. His constituent, Don Devore, was out of the state on a family emergency and missed the six-month deadline. Mr. Devore is concerned that the law did not allow of extenuating circumstances. If a person misses the six-month deadline, his only recourse is to take the residential contractor exam again. It is four hours long and costs $75 each time the test is taken. REPRESENATTIVE MEYER said that Catherine Reardon, Director, Division of Occupational Licensing, agreed that the law could have some flexibility and that others had also missed the deadline. The bill extends the timeline to apply from six months to two years, which has been amended to one year. Ms. Reardon said that a common cause for people missing the six-month deadline was because of processes involved in starting a new construction business, whether sole proprietor or corporation. Other examples include health and family emergencies. MS. ROBIN WARD, said she is a residential contractor in Anchorage and Co-chair of Legislative Affairs for the Alaska State Homebuilders Association. She supported HB 291. She said that it creates a little bit of flexibility without taking it too far. SENATOR LEMAN moved to pass CSHB 291(L&C) from committee with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered.