SJR 17-DESIGNATING 2009 AS THE YEAR OF ARMY NCO  9:40:04 AM CHAIR MENARD announced the consideration of SJR 17. JOSH TEMPEL, Staff, Veterans Caucus, Alaska State Legislature, said SJR 17 enacts a request from the United States Army Alaska Command to declare 2009 the year of the noncommissioned officer (NCO) corps of the United States Army to honor more than 200 years of service. NCOs are enlisted soldiers from corporal through sergeant major. It is a broad spectrum of people. NCOs serve as technical experts, trainers, and guardians of the army standards. The NCO corps is the backbone of the army and occupies a position of respect and leadership. This declaration comes at a time when the NCOs are invaluably leading the charge on the battlefields of Iraq, Afghanistan, the Philippines, and other locations around the world. The army requested this legislation, and it is a good way for Alaska to show its support for the army in Alaska. SENATOR KOOKESH asked if this is happening in other states. MR. TEMPEL said Hawaii was the first state to pass it. There are other states, too. 9:43:12 AM MAJOR WILLIAMS, Communications Officer, U.S. Army Alaska Command, said he doesn't know how many states have done proclamations, but at least one command from every state was asked to make this request. He is a former NCO, and he has two NCO combat cameramen that work for him. Without the NCOs there wouldn't be an army or it wouldn't be effective. The army wouldn't be able to get things done. NCOs "provide the direct line leadership that is required. If you're kicking in a door in Iraq to search a house, there's a non-com in charge." Every line in the marching band has an NCO in charge. It goes all the way down to the corporal ranks. He wants this to reiterate the relationship between the community and the army and show public support for the NCO who typically doesn't get recognized. Everyone wants the general, but without these people "we wouldn't have a nation that's free ... we wouldn't have the greatest military in the world." NCOs provide the small group leadership that is necessary to be effective. 9:45:52 AM NICHOLAS HENDERSON, Army Veteran, said he was at the bottom of the NCO spectrum as an E-4 team leader with direct supervision over 4 soldiers, 8 vehicles, 14 weapon systems, and all their training and disciplinary action. He has great respect for the NCOs over him; they have been mentors. His unit ran over 300 combat missions in Iraq from 2005 to 2006, and that included patrols and coordinated raids with rangers. Training is done by the NCOs; they have a wealth of knowledge. "If [they] weren't as functional as they are, things just wouldn't go the way they did." He spent a year training Iraqi police and military and U.S. soldiers in operations, vehicle maintenance, first aid, communication, and using equipment. SENATOR FRENCH thanked the witnesses for their service. SENATOR FRENCH moved to report SJR 17 from committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal note(s). There being no objection, the resolution moved out of committee.