HB 141 TERM OF FISH BOARD MEMBERS  The next order of business before the committee was HB 141, introduced by the House Special Committee on Fisheries. Number 084 REPRESENTATIVE AUSTERMAN explained HB 141 moves the appointment date of the Board of Fish appointees to a date after confirmation by the Legislature. The appointees would not actually sit on the board until June 30. This would prevent appointees from making board decisions prior to confirmation. SENATOR HALFORD asked Rep. Austerman if the House Special Committee on Fisheries considered applying the same provisions to game board members. REP. AUSTERMAN stated the committee did, and was told by several Board of Game members that the number of problems experienced by the game board were not nearly as severe as those experienced by the Board of Fish. Because of controversy surrounding the Board of Game, the Fisheries Committee chose to keep the measure specific to the Board of Fisheries. Number 116 SENATOR HOFFMAN asked if members would remain on the board during the interim, until replaced. REP. AUSTERMAN stated they would. SENATOR HOFFMAN believed that additional problems would occur once the new Governor has taken office, especially if the Legislature does not want to confirm an appointee. SENATOR LEMAN questioned the current procedure for appointees that are not confirmed. SENATOR HALFORD remarked the appointee remains on the board until the last day of the legislative session in which he/she was presented. After that time that appointee cannot serve, and another person can be appointed to serve until the next legislative session. SENATOR HOFFMAN believed that process to be better, otherwise a board member could remain on the board for several legislative sessions if the Legislature did not confirm any new appointees. Number 154 SENATOR HALFORD stated the bill would change the confirmation question from determining whether a specific person should be appointed to a specific position, to whether a specific person should replace an existing board member. That would give the Legislature the power to retain a board member. REP. AUSTERMAN commented under HB 141, the Governor makes the appointment, but the appointee is not seated until confirmed. SENATOR HALFORD noted if the Governor does not make an appointment, the existing board member would remain in that seat. SENATOR TAYLOR made the correlation to the situation with the current attorney general. The committee discussed alternatives. SENATOR HOFFMAN stated the problem is an appointee will sit on a board but be unable to vote until confirmed. SENATOR HALFORD suggested making term changes, so that terms become vacant during the legislative session, and delete the provision that says, "and until a successor is appointed and the successor's term begins." Number 210 SENATOR PEARCE felt there was a lot of merit to the concept of having a person on the board not serve until confirmation, but if there is a vacancy in April and the Governor does not appoint a person before the end of the legislative session, the seat would be vacant for a whole year. SENATOR TAYLOR moved HB 141 from committee with individual recommendations. SENATORS HOFFMAN and HALFORD objected to the motion. SENATOR LEMAN announced the bill would be held in committee for further work.