SB 92-LIMITED LICENSE IGNITION INTERLOCK  9:03:04 AM CHAIR MCGUIRE announced the consideration of SB 92. SENATOR GREEN moved to adopt the Committee Substitute (CS) for SB 92, labeled 25-LS0439\M, Luckhaupt, as a work draft. Hearing no objections, Version M was before the committee. SENATOR FRENCH said the CS addresses the previously discussed issue of remote locations where it is impractical to require an interlock system. He described a person who may live in a small village but gets a DWI in Anchorage or vice versa. The solution roughly parallels the requirements for automobile insurance; whereby some parts of the state are exempt. He adopted the same geographic divisions for SB 92. There will be no differentiation based on who gets the DWI, but the requirement to have an interlocking device is based only on geography, he explained. 9:06:03 AM SENATOR FRENCH said there is a new subsection on pages 6 and 7, which says: not withstanding all the requirements that you must have the ignition interlock, the court will waive the requirement when operating a vehicle in certain communities. The communities are listed on a separate handout, he said. SENATOR STEVENS said it's convoluted, and he asked about rental cars. SENATOR FRENCH said there is a mark on driver's licenses indicating if a person needs an interlock device. He said he doesn't know if the rental car company would notice it, but the onus is on the individual. He or she would be breaking the law by driving a rental car without the device. SENATOR BUNDE said the list of where one could get a waiver is substantial. He thought it was based on the connection to state highways. He noted that Iliamna has many roads. 9:09:01 AM DUANE BANNOCK, Alaska Division of Motor Vehicles, said AS 28.10.011 says vehicle registration and mandatory insurance are exempted for a vehicle driven or moved in an area that is off of the highway system and has a traffic count of less than 500. SENATOR BUNDE asked how often the traffic counts are taken, because Iliamna, Fort Yukon, and Kotzebue have a lot of traffic. MR. BANNOCK said he relies on data from the Department of Transportation. 9:11:00 AM CHAIR MCGUIRE said agreed that those three communities do stand out. She noted that Senator French worked with the committee to strike a balance. It is now an issue of educating people, but there will always be those who try to skirt the law, she stated. MR. BANNOCK said the bill is pretty darn good. 9:12:01 AM SENATOR BUNDE said the intent is to protect the innocent driver from the habitual drunk, and people in rural Alaska should have the same kind of protection as urban Alaskans. He suggested that adjustments need to be made to the list of exempt communities, but that is beyond the scope of this discussion. SENATOR STEVENS moved the CS for SB 92, labeled 25-LS0439\M, from committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal note(s). There being no objection, CSSB 92(STA) passed from committee.