HB 356-EXTEND ALCOHOL DELIVERY SITE SUNSET  CHAIR CON BUNDE announced HB 356 to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE REGGIE JOULE, sponsor, said some larger communities in his district have elected to go damp, which means being able to import alcohol, but not legally being able to sell it. Dry means not being able to import any liquor to communities at all. Barrow, Kotzebue and Bethel are damp; Nome is wet. All of the villages surrounding Barrow and Kotzebue are dry. Bootlegging is a challenge in these communities and residents are constantly voting on whether to be either wet, damp or dry. Finally in 2001, the Alcohol Delivery Site Law allowed Barrow to vote on using a distribution center. Now, Gold Streaks, freight and luggage coming into Barrow arrived through that distribution center. A permit is required and an ordinance has established amounts of alcohol that can be brought in. Barrow, with a little over 1,700 permits, has found that this system helped smooth out the emotional turmoil it continually went through in voting on whether to be wet, dry or damp. Kotzebue and Bethel have chosen not to utilize this method. Representative Joule said SB 356 simply extends the sunset provision for the alcohol delivery site to July 1, 2008. CHAIR BUNDE asked how much alcohol a Barrow resident can bring in. REPRESENTATIVE JOULE replied they may not import more than 13 gallons of malt beverages, 20 liters of wine or 4.5 liters of distilled spirits per month. If an alcoholic beverage is being carried as luggage, it's supposed to be marked on the luggage. After people got fined a few times, it worked pretty well. CHAIR BUNDE noted that at Christmas time, at least one Anchorage post office refused to accept presents that were wrapped in alcohol-labeled boxes, because they might be going to a distribution center. He asked how much people were charged to pay for the program. REPRESENTATIVE JOULE replied a $25 annual fee. SENATOR HOLLIS FRENCH asked how the distribution center kept alcohol from being shipped through Barrow to Nuiqsut, for instance. REPRESENTATIVE JOULE answered that first of all, you have to be a resident of Barrow. Theoretically, alcohol could be smuggled to the smaller villages, but then the permit is at risk. Most of those villages have flights from Fairbanks through Prudhoe Bay and Barrow could be easily bypassed. This program has not stopped alcohol from going to the villages, but it has cut down on the amount. SENATOR GARY STEVENS said he assumed the goal of the program was to reduce alcohol problems and he wanted to know if the program reduced consumption. REPRESENTATIVE JOULE replied that the Department of Public Safety on the North Slope feels that it has. It has also improved the emotional wars over what status to be in. CHAIR BUNDE asked if anyone else wanted to testify on HB 356. There was no response and he said this was the first hearing and he would hold the bill for a future date.