SJR 8 PRIMARY MFG OF PUBLICLY OWNED TIMBER  VICE-CHAIR GREEN called the Senate Resources Committee meeting to order at 3:30 p.m. and announced Chairman Halford was excused for a family emergency. She noted the presence of Senators Taylor, Torgerson, Leman, and Sharp. The first order of business before the committee was SJR 8, sponsored by Senator Torgerson. SENATOR TORGERSON gave the following overview of SJR 8. Legislation identical to SJR 8 passed the House and Senate last year. SJR 8 asks Congress to grant approval to the State of Alaska to regulate, restrict, or prohibit the export of unprocessed logs harvested from state lands, and lands of political subdivisions and the University of Alaska. SJR 8 was introduced because after a recent sawmill closure in Seward, the State held a timber sale in a nearby area. The logs from that sale were exported to Oregon for primary manufacturing. Alaska was not included in the 1990 Congressional Act that exempted 11 contiguous western states from Commerce Clauses and extended the ban on unprocessed log exports in that area. Trees from those states cannot be purchased and sent to Alaska for primary manufacturing; primary manufacturing must occur in those regions. SENATOR TAYLOR commented in Southeast Alaska for some time, private land owners clear cut their properties, then left half of the felled logs on the land to rot because the Japanese, who were the primary purchasers of the round logs, only wanted the highest grade logs to make musical instruments, among other things. Consequently, the value-added jobs, as many are trumpeting as the cure-all for this industry, were shipped out since the mid-70's. The tragedy is that the none of the people who owned that resource had the benefit of the majority of those jobs. Even the jobs in extracting and harvesting the resource did not involve a majority of the people who owned it. Today, most of the people who own those lands are in about the same economic straights they were before they harvested the land. In retrospect, we find the resource has been depleted and the owners were only peripherally benefitted. Had a sustained use policy been used on that same land, thousands of people could have been employed forever. Once again, Alaska has to beg Congress to allow the people of Alaska to control their destinies. He discussed the case of Southcentral Timber Development, Inc. v. Wunnicke. SJR 8 will allow the state to make certain that timber jobs remain in Alaska. Number 167 SENATOR LEMAN noted he supported this legislation last year when it was before the Senate Resources Committee. The Legislature needs to do a lot more to help local economies. SJR 8 will be a small step toward that goal. He moved SJR 8 from committee with individual recommendations. VICE-CHAIR GREEN stated there was no further testimony on SJR 8, and hearing no objections to the motion, moved SJR 8 from committee. She commented the Mat-Su area is in need of a continual supply of timber.