HJR 36-MITIGATING GLACIER BAY FISHING CLOSURES  CHAIR GARY STEVENS announced HJR 36 to be up for consideration. LINDA SYLVESTER, staff to Representative Bruce Weyhrauch, explained that the resolution asks the National Park Service to make an effort to mitigate the adverse consequences that fishing closures in Glacier Bay have had on the people that used the area. SENATOR STEDMAN commented that he is still uncomfortable with the settlement with the National Park Service and anything that the Legislature can do to check the aggressive movement of the federal government into the submerged tidelands in the state the better. He said he supports the resolution, but had doubts that the National Park Service would pay attention to it. Certainly there was a monetary settlement for this generation of fishermen, but Glacier Bay has produced fisheries since the ice began to recede and it's likely that it would have continued to be a productive area for several hundred years more. MS. SYLVESTER told him that Representative Weyhrauch introduced previous legislation asking the state to pay better attention when a situation arises in which the Department of Fish and Game is in a position of ceding authority of fish and game resources. CHAIR GARY STEVENS asked what happened to the bill. MS. SYLVESTER told him it passed. SENATOR STEDMAN remarked that the federal government is also moving to secure areas such as Anan Creek that would further limit Alaska citizens' freedom of movement. "I don't feel that the issue is over with Glacier Bay. There's going to be a continuing push by the federal government into our submerged tidelands and our access to them," he said. MS. SYLVESTER suggested that he and Representative Weyhrauch needed to have lunch together. SENATOR JOHN COWDERY motioned to move HJR 36 from committee with individual recommendations and accompanying fiscal note. There being no objection, it was so ordered.