SB 169-WORKERS' COMPENSATION RECORDS  CHAIR CON BUNDE announced SB 169 to be up for consideration. SENATOR THERRIAULT, sponsor, said SB 169 is intended to close a loophole in the privacy statutes with regards to information that is collected by the Workers' Compensation system. Currently it makes it illegal for an attorney to contact an injured worker to solicit business to represent that person in the system. But language does not make it clear that state agencies have the power to withhold certain requests for information from the system that can be used to make those solicitations. The bill does not intend to inhibit disclosure of public record information regarding the specific claim to a newspaper reporter or an insurer seeking names of employers who are uninsured to provide the workers' compensation insurance. It just intends to keep the individual's information from being sold. SENATOR THERRIAULT gave the committee some background saying that an injured Alaska worker was contacted by out-of-state attorneys who had received information about his claim. They did not take his case, because, he surmised, it was not for enough money. Senator Therriault said: This is just a clear case of the type of activity that we don't want to happen and if we want to prevent that from happening, we need to make it very clear in the statute that the state agency, and specifically the Workers' Comp system, can refuse to disburse information that would be used by these outside sources. 1:55:11 PM SENATOR SEEKINS proposed an immediate effective date as Amendment 1. SENATOR THERRIAULT said that was okay with him. SENATOR SEEKINS moved conceptual Amendment 1 to insert an immediate effective date. There were no objections and Amendment 1 was adopted. 1:56:06 PM SENATOR SEEKINS moved CSSB 169(L&C) from committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal notes. Senators Ben Stevens, Seekins, Davis, Ellis and Chair Bunde voted yea; and CSSB 169(L&C) moved from committee.