CHAIRMAN MILLER called the Resources Committee meeting to order at 3:35 p.m. and announced HB 191 (CONTRACTOR OPERATED STATE HATCHERIES) to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAMS, sponsor, said many aquaculture associations have been cooperative about operating many hatcheries under contract rather than see them close down for lack of state funding. The language in current law has caused some logistical and financial problems for the contractors which has made it unfeasible to get some of the state's hatcheries under contract. The law only allows cost recovery funds generated at the state owned hatchery to be used for the operation of that facility, so the funds cannot go to other facilities, if they have a bad year. This places an unfair financial risk on groups we are trying to convince to accept the responsibility of running our state hatcheries, REPRESENTATIVE WILLIAMS said. Under this bill cost recovery money can flow in both directions between the contractors who own the facilities and those contracted to run facilities for the state. This bill is supported by the aquaculture associations, the UFA, and the ADF&G. No one has expressed opposition to the bill, he concluded. Number 80 BRUCE BACHEN, Northern Southeast Regional Aquaculture Association, supported HB 191, because it allows them to have a single financial plan for the corporation. The strength of the overall program is enhanced by diversification of all of the species that they raise and all the sites they operate. It's healthy to allow one project to depend on another because of the fluctuations in the market. Allowing revenues generated by cost recovery to be used for capital construction is another good point of the bill, he said. JEFF OLSEN, Operations Manager, Prince William Sound Aquaculture Corporation, read a letter from the Corporation in support of HB 191. JERRY MCCUNE, President, United Fishermen of Alaska, supported HB 191. He said one of the problems is that Gulkana hatchery has no cost recovery, so they have to take funds out of the existing hatchery. This way they could move funds from hatchery to hatchery. Number 173 SENATOR ADAMS moved to pass HB 191 from committee with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered.