HJR 41 JONES ACT EXEMPTION FOR BULK COMMODITIES  Number 109 CHAIRMAN RIEGER introduced HJR 41 as the next order of business before the committee. JACK PHELPS, staff to Representative Williams, stated that the Jones Act and the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 discriminate against the State of Alaska. The Jones Act contains a provision which requires the movement of goods and people between U.S. ports to be transported on vessels that are manufactured in the U.S. with U.S. crews. Mr. Phelps explained that Alaska becomes affected by the Jones Act when Alaska ships Alaskan commodities between Alaskan ports and the West Coast or Hawaiian ports. HJR 41 was the result of the interest of the growing coal industry in Alaska. Currently, Alaska would be non-competitive to foreign coal because of the Jones Act. HJR 41 requests that Congress create an exemption from the Jones Act for bulk commodities being shipped from Alaska. He pointed out that other bulk commodities in Alaska could also be positively affected by this resolution. Quarried rock could be one of those bulk commodities that could be positively affected. Number 147 SENATOR TAYLOR moved that HJR 41 be moved out of committee with individual recommendations. Hearing no objections, it was so ordered.