CSHB 220(JUD)-BAN COMPUTER-ASSISTED REMOTE HUNTING  5:02:14 PM CHAIR HUGGINS announced CSHB 220(JUD) to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE BUCH, sponsor of HB 220, related that 26 states have already banned computer-assisted remote hunting and others are in the process of it. When he first heard about this type of hunting, he thought it was a joke, but then he found out it was not. He said that Internet hunting is when a person anywhere in the world can shoot animals from their living rooms by hooking up their computers to a rifle through Internet. They are able to control the aiming and firing of the rifle from the computer keypad and to make a kill with the click of the mouse. This practice began in Texas in 2005 when an entrepreneur offered people the ability to shoot big game on his land via remote control technology. The Texas legislature shut him down. Since then, 26 states have passed legislation to ban this practice and legislation in 8 other states is currently pending. HB 122 would prohibit this despicable practice in Alaska. REPRESENTATIVE BUCH concluded, "As everyone knows, we have some of the best big game in the world in Alaska. We need to ban this practice before it hits. I want to make sure the guys who are doing this don't come here." He said that HB 122 prohibits individuals from engaging in Internet hunting in Alaska. It also prohibits anyone from providing services or operating facilities to enable computerized hunting activities. 5:04:47 PM MATT ROBUS, Director, Division of Wildlife Conservation, Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G), said he wanted to specifically address section (b), which addresses people with disabilities and the Americans with Disabilities Act. He was supportive of it, but said today he became aware of the existence of an idea to add an amendment that would prohibit another type of hunting activating using remote TV cameras for something called "electronic patterning." He related how he had a discussion with the executive director of the Alaska Outdoor Council (AOC) and the Department of Law before coming to the meeting to figure out language, but the consensus was that language to prohibit that type of activity is not simple and has a lot of nuances. It's the type of activity that is usually prohibited through 5 AAC 92.080, which prohibits the use of cell phones, radios, pits, and fires and things like that for the taking of wildlife. Electronic patterning seems to be the type of activity that might fit into that and if so, the Board of Game has a statewide regulatory meeting scheduled for January 2008 in which that particular section of the code is open. So he thought that type of language could be hammered out there through the public proposal process better than here. He said that Rod Arno, Executive Director, AOC, expressed an interest in going in that direction. CHAIR HUGGINS thanked him and said HB 220 would be held for further coordination and passed out on Wednesday. There being no further business to come before the committee, he adjourned the meeting at 5:08:11 PM.