Constitutional Amendments aren't offered as a 'bill.' They're offered as a 'joint resolution' or 'JR.'
SJR (Senate Joint Resolution) 21, sponsored by the Senate Community and Regional Affairs Committee, has now made it through the Senate State Affairs, Senate Judiciary, and Senate Finance committees to the Senate Rules Committee. (You can see the history of the resolution here.) I've only been to one of the hearings and I'm not completely sure of this, but I think it is relatively intact. It's still called SJR 21, not CS(Committee Substitute)JR 38. What I do know is that it still calls for increasing the House by eight members and the Senate by four members. And it's made it all the way to the Rules Committee, the last step before going to the Senate floor.
SJR 21
03/15/10 1823 (S) REFERRED TO RULES
Meanwhile, the House version, sponsored by Peggy Wilson of Wrangell, has been changed from HB 38 to CSHB 38 and would now only increase the House by four members and the Senate by two members. That happened in its first committee - State Affairs - when Rep. Seaton proposed the change and sponsor Rep. Wilson accepted it. It's now made it through House Judiciary and is in House Finance.
CSHJR 38
03/15/10 1737 (H) REFERRED TO FINANCE
Whichever version passes on the chamber floor - the Senate floor or the House floor - will become the version that moves on. That isn't very clear is it? I'll try again. If the Senate Joint Resolution passes on the Senate floor before the House Joint Resolution passes on the House floor, from then on it will be called SJR 21 and CSHJR 38 will disappear. At least that's how I understand it.
Basically, if the resolution passes, a Constitutional Amendment "shall be placed before the voters of the state at the next general election..." to increase the size of the legislature.
The rural legislators want this bad. The 2010 census data is expected to show increased population in Matsu, Anchorage, Kenai, and Fairbanks and decreased population in rural Alaska. These will certainly be in the more urban districts required. Without raising the number of legislators, some rural districts will be merged and they will get geographically bigger. One Senate district is already the largest in the US and getting around to visit constituents requires expensive travel. Meanwhile urban legislators can walk across their districts in a few hours.
The urban legislators aren't particularly excited, and it means there will be first year expenses for remodeling the Capitol to accommodate the additional legislators plus their regular annual expenses: $6 million the first year (would include the remodeling) and $4 million every year after for the Senate version, and half that for the House version since they cut the number of new legislators in half. (You can click the links to see the fiscal notes for the House and Senate.)
The people I've asked about this don't think it has a chance. Neither the Senate nor the House versions have passed either full body yet, and then they will have to reconcile the different numbers of members to be increased.
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Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Keeping Your Website Up-to-Date: UA President Search
Early on March 16, the Board of Regents' Presidential Search page of the University of Alaska looked like this:
They met March 15 to make select the new President of the University. No announcement means either they didn't decide on a particular candidate or, more likely, they did, but haven't settled with that candidate on conditions of the appointment - salary, etc.
But it would be nice if they didn't have old news up on the Presidential Search webpage. Websites are important. A lot of organizations concentrate on getting them up, but not keeping them up-to-date. As this example shows.
They met March 15 to make select the new President of the University. No announcement means either they didn't decide on a particular candidate or, more likely, they did, but haven't settled with that candidate on conditions of the appointment - salary, etc.
But it would be nice if they didn't have old news up on the Presidential Search webpage. Websites are important. A lot of organizations concentrate on getting them up, but not keeping them up-to-date. As this example shows.
Monday, March 15, 2010
New Firefox - 11 Days to Download?
It actually said 62 days when it started. I've seen hours before, but never days. Fortunately, it actually only took a few minutes altogether to download the new Firefox 3.6. I've had a fair amount of trouble with compatibility between Firefox and Snow Leopard. I was hoping this new update would smooth things out. We'll see. The 62 days warning doesn't bode well, but the speed it actually loaded was fine.
Red Shirts Back in Bangkok - What's Happening?
With so many countries around the world, it is hard to keep the various political parties and leaders straight. Things have been heating up in Thailand for several years now. While the Thai king has been revered in most of the country (in the far south where there is a larger Muslim population in this mostly Buddhist country, he's less respected), he is the longest reigning monarch in the world and his health has become a question. While there is a Princess who has followed her father's footsteps and tirelessly worked to help poor Thais, she is not in line for succession and her brother is not held in the high esteem as their father. When the moral power of the current monarchy is gone, there is no telling what will happen.
That is the backdrop of the clash between the yellow shirts and the red shirts. It's tempting to equate unknown foreign situations to better known home situations, but it's also misleading. You have to take things for what they are and not fill in the blanks with what you are familiar with. It's hard to leave the blanks blank. But you're going to be more accurate if you leave the ?????? there than if you fill the blanks in with your own cultural fillers.
Basically there is a clash between the 'yellow shirts' who are the better educated, more urban, more middle class and elite Thais, with power centered in Bangkok and the less educated, more working class and rural Thais, whose power is centered in Chiang Mai. The yellow represent the traditionally more politically powerful, but a smaller portion of the population.
The current prime minister, Abhbisit, born in UK and with bachelors, masters, and doctorate all from Oxford, represents a more 'rational' legal, and elite Western perspective. He came to power when the military deposed former Prime Minister Thaksin. Thaksin also has a Western education.
You can read about both Abhisit and Thaksin in far more detail at Wikipedia.
Here's the beginning of an on-the-ground guest blogger post on New Mandela:
Bangkok Pundit is monitoring the coverage of the red shirt march on Bangkok.
That is the backdrop of the clash between the yellow shirts and the red shirts. It's tempting to equate unknown foreign situations to better known home situations, but it's also misleading. You have to take things for what they are and not fill in the blanks with what you are familiar with. It's hard to leave the blanks blank. But you're going to be more accurate if you leave the ?????? there than if you fill the blanks in with your own cultural fillers.
Basically there is a clash between the 'yellow shirts' who are the better educated, more urban, more middle class and elite Thais, with power centered in Bangkok and the less educated, more working class and rural Thais, whose power is centered in Chiang Mai. The yellow represent the traditionally more politically powerful, but a smaller portion of the population.
The current prime minister, Abhbisit, born in UK and with bachelors, masters, and doctorate all from Oxford, represents a more 'rational' legal, and elite Western perspective. He came to power when the military deposed former Prime Minister Thaksin. Thaksin also has a Western education.
Master's degree in Criminal Justice at Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Kentucky in 1974 and a PhD in Criminal Justice at Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas in 1978. . [Bangkok Post]Thaksin, a media industry billionaire, is more populist, He's also been convicted on corruption charges and would be arrested if he returned to Thailand. That probably would set off riots even greater than what we've seen already.
You can read about both Abhisit and Thaksin in far more detail at Wikipedia.
Here's the beginning of an on-the-ground guest blogger post on New Mandela:
Most commentators appear to be trying to figure out the end game of the next few day’s red shirt rally in Bangkok and speculating about the possibility that violence will break out, but there are few who pay much attention to ordinary red shirt supporters. This has been a persistent pattern among both journalists and academics, though it is refreshing to note that some recent Bangkok Post reports include some references to ordinary red shirt people and their motivation in traveling to Bangkok for the demonstration of 14 March 2010, in marked contrast to its reporting a year ago. Nonetheless, the main focus of the [primarily state-run] TV media has been the prospect of violence, as with the local Thai and English-language press. I offer this descriptive cameo account simply to put some flesh on the bones of the leeched accounts of the red shirts and to give readers a sense of immediacy in the current events as they are unfolding. It is made as preliminary to what I’m sure will be a compelling and dynamic portrait of evolving events from the intrepid Nick Nostitz, who is pounding these Bangkok streets as I write, having myself returned from the blazing heat of the rally site to the comfort of my air-conditioned room in Sukhumvit. . . [The rest is here.]
Bangkok Pundit is monitoring the coverage of the red shirt march on Bangkok.
BP: Are the reds going away?
BBC on Abhisit's response to the red shirts:
Flanked by ministers and coalition allies, Mr Abhisit said on national television, from the barracks: "The protesters have demanded that I dissolve the house before midday (0500 GMT) today, but the coalition parties agree the demand cannot be met."BP: If the coalition parties don't budge, then what for the red shirts?
"Elections must be held under common rules and genuine calm. We have to listen to other people's voices, not just the protesters," he said.
btw, BP can't live blog, but check out Nirmal Ghosh of the Straits Times' blog with hourly updates so far. Key quote:
1115hrs Bangkok time: Probably about 500 soldiers with riot shields and communication equipment deployed about 20m inside wrought iron fence at 11th Infantry HQ. Main gate protected by coils of razor wire. A thicket of razor wire also lines the inside of the fence. Clearly anyone trying to get over risks severe lacerations.Siam Report also has a live blog post with plenty of updates:
There are around 5,000 reds here and growing. Road outside clogged with their vehicles. Two pedestrian overhead bridges clogged with reds. They are jeering and shouting abuse at the soldiers. A mood of excitement is in the air not one of aggressiveness.
Thailand has a history of compromise which kept the nation uncolonized as all its neighbors became either French or British colonies. In WW II it was able to maintain its pro Allied connections through a government abroad, while the country was taken over by the Japanese. I'm just not close enough to what is happening to really be able to interpret the current years of turmoil with too much confidence. But the two blogs I've linked here and in the column on the right - Mandela and Pundit - do give useful reports.Thai Rath: เมื่อ เวลาประมาณ 09.50 น. วันที่ 15 มี.ค. นายอภิสิทธิ์ เวชชาชีวะ นายกรัฐมนตรี พร้อมแกนนำพรรคร่วมรัฐบาล อาทิ นายวรรณรัตน์ ชาญนุกูล หัวหน้าพรรครวมใจไทยชาติพัฒนา นายชาญชัย ชัยรุ่งเรือง หัวหน้าพรรคเพื่อแผ่นดิน นายชุมพล ศิลปอาชา หัวหน้าพรรคชาติไทยพัฒนา นายโสภณ ซารัมย์
Sophan Sorlam BJT commm. & transport minister was there for government announcement that there won't be a House dissoution. I guess Thanong will have to find some new sources or change the story a bit.
Board of Regents Meeting in Anchorage on Presidential Decision
I just called the board of regents office and was told they are in Anchorage meeting and no predictions on whether they would announce today.
Rep. Gatto Praises Rich Mauer's ADN Article
The House Republicans press conference just ended this morning and they spent a fair amount of time on oil and gas issues. If Alaskans are going to be informed voters, I think it behooves them to listen in on the legislators first hand now and then so they understand not only the issues but the people who represent them. The press conference is on Gavel to Gavel.
Here's the page for today's legislative schedule ("today" means 'today' everyday) on Gavel to Gavel. The press conference just finished and they don't have the audio up yet. It will be on that page later today, maybe within the hour. If you want to hear a previous day's hearing you can play with the calendar on that page. You can see it shows in red the day of the schedule you are looking at. The press conference that is just completed is on the bottom.
In any case, during the discussion between media representatives, Rep. Gatto who made a strong stand for the legislature to stand by its legal commitment to the AGIA law that the legislature passed by an overwhelming majority, praised Rich Mauer's piece in the Anchorage Daily News today. Here's the beginning of the article. Get the whole article at the link.
Here's the audio of the press conference:
Here's the page for today's legislative schedule ("today" means 'today' everyday) on Gavel to Gavel. The press conference just finished and they don't have the audio up yet. It will be on that page later today, maybe within the hour. If you want to hear a previous day's hearing you can play with the calendar on that page. You can see it shows in red the day of the schedule you are looking at. The press conference that is just completed is on the bottom.
In any case, during the discussion between media representatives, Rep. Gatto who made a strong stand for the legislature to stand by its legal commitment to the AGIA law that the legislature passed by an overwhelming majority, praised Rich Mauer's piece in the Anchorage Daily News today. Here's the beginning of the article. Get the whole article at the link.
Legislators hear plans for alternative energy
With a gas pipeline still a dream, wind, hydro, volcano possible.Published: March 15th, 2010 08:35 AM
Last Modified: March 15th, 2010 08:36 AMJUNEAU -- With some legislators fuming over the pace of in-state gas development and broadly supporting energy diversification, a special House committee summoned the promoters of six large Railbelt projects last week to explain themselves and whether they should be subsidized with public funds.One of the projects -- a wind farm already under construction by Cook Inlet Region Inc. on Fire Island -- is poised to change Anchorage's view to the west and the approach to the city's international airport. The Anchorage Native corporation, owner of the island, plans to prepare sites for 36 wind turbines this summer and have the project in operation by the end of 2011. . .
Read more: http://www.adn.com/2010/03/14/1183482/legislators-hear-several-energy.html#ixzz0iGlxbV3q
Here's the audio of the press conference:
Labels:
AGIA,
Alaska Legislature 2010,
media,
oil
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Southeast Alaska Regional Science Fair - Great Work, Great Kids, Great Mentors
We went to the Southeast Alaska Regional Science Fair yesterday. I wouldn't have known anything about it except one of the participants had emailed to get permission to use a cow parsnip picture he found on my blog.
The gym at Juneau-Douglas High School was crowded and noisy, but we found the cow parsnip experiment pretty quickly.
Here's David, a bit surprised that I actually showed up, explaining his project using ground up cow parsnip mixed with water to test whether it would kill mosquito larvae. I talked to a lot of kids about their projects and all were as enthusiastic and knowledgeable. I did keep the camera close to his face because I was afraid the background noise would drown out his voice. Below are pictures of other exhibits to give you an idea of the wide range of topics explored.
All these pictures can be enlarged with a double click.
There were a lot of projects relating to marine biology which makes sense in a place like Juneau. This one is on the Effect of Seawater Ph level of Kelp Egg Development. But it made more sense when I found this on a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) webpage:
The Auke Bay Lab (ABL) has become a major contributor to the success of the SASF. More than 25% of the ABL staff serves as mentors; projects generally take several months for students to complete. In addition, more than 50% of ABL staff serves as judges for the fair. ABL staff members represent a significant proportion of the fair’s board of directors and were responsible for developing the rules for judging. In the last five years at least one of the projects advancing to ISEF has been mentored by ABL staff and these projects have won prizes in three of the last five years.
This one is clear if you enlarge it.
I was impressed with every student I spoke to. They were all ready to explain in great detail how they did their projects and what they learned. This one found, using a particular instrument for testing arrogance and vanity, that both the girls and boys were about equally arrogant, but the girls outpaced the boys in vanity (lower right bar chart.)
When the announcement came to close down about 1:30, you could tell that these kids had other things they wanted to do with their Saturday afternoon. Projects were dismantled and tables were folded and gone in record speed.
Labels:
education,
environment,
Juneau,
Knowing
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Good Mail, Bad Mail: Fair and Festival
I got a good blog related email this week and one not so good. The good one was from a Juneau Douglas High School student who asked if he could use one of my photos for his science project. Part of their rules requires that they get permission to use photos and give credit for photos they use on their posters. He didn't know I was in Juneau and I surprised him when I showed up to see his project.
Here he is explaining his project where he tested crushed cow parsnip in water as a way to naturally kill mosquito larvae. I'll do a longer post on the science fair later.
The other communication wasn't nearly as pleasant. It was a letter from a San Diego attorney alleging that I had libeled his client and that he was giving me a week to remove the offending post. While I didn't think there was anything wrong with the post - you regulars know that I'm pretty careful about what I say - I have engaged an attorney. I can say that the letter caused me to poke around a bit and things get more and more interesting. I'll put up more soon. The offending post is this one.
Labels:
ethics/corruption,
Movies,
photo,
plants
Friday, March 12, 2010
House Judiciary: Liens, More Legislators, and Guns for Felons
At least one plane made it out this morning, but the word was that most legislators were stuck in Juneau even though the Anchorage caucus had scheduled a meeting this weekend in Anchorage.
(H)JUDICIARY | STANDING COMMITTEE * | |||||||
Mar 12 Friday 1:00 PM | CAPITOL 120 | |||||||
+ | HB 253 | MECHANIC/MATERIALMEN LIENS | TELECONFERENCED | |||||
*+ | HB 408 | MISCONDUCT INVOLVING WEAPONS | TELECONFERENCED | |||||
+ | HJR 38 | CONST. AM: INCREASE NUMBER OF LEGISLATORS | TELECONFERENCED | |||||
+ | Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled | TELECONFERENCED |
Opening at 1:14pm. Two excused members are here because of the snow storm and they apparently weren't able to fly out.
Summary
HB 253 Mechanic/Materialmen Liens - sponsored by Committee Chair Ramras - would change the amount of time a business has to put a lien on someone for non-payment. It would change the time limit from 90 days to 120 days. Rep. Ramras called this the "Rocky Bill."
The first to testify was Rocky Pavey owner of Rocky's heating. Rep. Ramras introduced him as a friend since age 14 and Lathrop High Shool's best ever athlete and Hall of Fame Football player. His testimony was similar to his written letter, though the friendly bantering continued between Chair Ramras and Rocky throughout.
So, 90 days isn't long enough to be civil with one's long time customers yet weed out those who are going to stiff you. He said he's lost tens of thousands, if not a hundred thousand to people who take advantage of the 90 day limit. Another 30 days would be the right amount he and others said.
The others testified along the same lines and Chair Ramras said the bankers lobbyists are opposed, but I didn't catch the reason.
The bill passed out of committee. Next stop the Rules Committee and from there it would go to the House floor and then it would have to go through all that on the Senate side. And there are less than 40 days left.
HJR 38: CONST. AM: INCREASE NUMBER OF LEGISLATORS
This one I've heard argued in State Affairs and in the Senate version, but I can't remember where. This passed out of committee after Rep. Herron played the "Angel's" advocate by asking who is going to promote this Constitutional Amendment among urban voters who will not see they have anything to gain. Rep. Gruenberg said it keeps all districts a little smaller than they would be in terms of population and that's good for everyone. It was passed out of the committee. I think it goes to House Finance next.
HB 408: MISCONDUCT INVOLVING WEAPONS
This would allow felons who had served their time to carry weapons, including concealed weapons. Alaska had a law with which, apparently, everyone was reasonably satisfied. It let felons (I think just those who had not used a weapon in their crime) gradually gain back the right to have weapons up to, but not including, concealed weapons. All was fine, until the Feds passed a law that said if you had any state weapons restrictions, you couldn't have any weapon. So the part that prohibited concealed weapons use, essentially prevented people from using any firearms. Testimony came from reformed felons who wanted to go hunting, who needed weapons to go fishing in bear country, and a bush pilot who needs a weapon as part of his business in rural Alaska. Also from Robert Judy of the NRA Alaska and Wayne Anthony Ross. Everyone seemed to be supportive, but they wanted more information to tweek the bill a abit.
I'm going to post this now and add my notes when we get back from dinner later tonight.
UPDATE March 13: I've added the rough notes, if this works, it should be linked after the break. [I've tried this unsuccessfully before. It's not working, I'll have to figure out how to make this feature work.]
Here are my ROUGH NOTES. AGAIN, ASSUME THESE ARE CLOSE, BUT DON'T DEPEND ON THEM. CHECK THE AUDIO FROM GAVEL TO GAVEL (Get House Judiciary March 12, 2010) TO GET A MORE ACCURATE ACCOUNT.
State Affairs: Electronic Voting for Coops, Violent Crimes Compensation, and Personnel Board Changes
I got there half an hour late today. I've got some blog issues I'm trying work through. But they hadn't gotten far through the agenda.
And that's as far as they got by 10am. There had been a Saturday session scheduled this week, but it was canceled. A lot of constituent meetings are scheduled for Anchorage this week, and maybe other places as well. But Chair Lynn said that since we're into the second half of the session and lots of work remains to be done, expect a Saturday session next week.
Here are my rough notes from the meeting. I wasn't going to post them, but something's strange with the Gavel to Gavel. I know they had some server problems. But now it looks like stuff is up, but it doesn't give the embeddable format it had before and the downloads are cfm, not mp3 any more. So maybe it's just still down. So STANDARD WARNING; NOTES ARE VERY ROUGH, USE AS AN APPROXIMATION OF WHAT WAS SAID AT THE MEETING.
8:33: [I came in midstream, things were scheduled to begin at 8am]
Gatto: I’m looking how to scam the system, those techies know how to do this.
Chugach Rep: - Can’t answer every question about the what ifs.
Gatto: Why not both a paper and electronic ballot.
Chugach Rep: What happens the machine stuffs the ballot in the envelope, accidentally, stuffs in two. The outgoing process. On return can only send one ballot. Your name gets stamped now when the ballot comes in and if we get another one we know we already have one. Everyone can cast in person. We have procedures to make sure that they haven’t voted by mail and come in. Also people who think they voted, but they didn’t sign the envelope. If they show up, we give them a ballot.
Gatto: What if someone mails a ballot for Candidate A, eletronic for B, and personal for C. Would you investigate for fraud?
Chugach Rep: It happens ½ dozen times a year where machine jams or something happens and a person votes more than once. “Here’s an envelope that contains two ballots, which one do you want to select?” The committee makes a decision. You’d think they would be identical. Usually they are. Once or twice in my 20 years they were different.
Committee makes its own decision about how such ballots are counted.
Gatto: It’s one ballot per household right?
Chugach Rep: One per member. A single person can have a membership. Married couple can share a membership. Safeway - corp - has
Gatto: My wife gets a mail ballot and I counter her vote by voting electronically.
Chugach Rep: We have procedure - we used to have if we get two ballots, the first one counts. More recently I think it’s the last balot that counts. Committees rationalize differently. My goal is to have an election that survives any challenge.
Gruenberg: three lines of Q
1. Sponsor statement MTA have voted to allow new by laws to allow this voting. In process, before implementation can take place Legislature must amend to allow this. So no one has started this?
Chugach Rep: as far as I know no one has begun this, tho MTA and Chugach have voted to change
2. “Excpet that electronic transmission will not be the only way a person can vote:” Technically, you could have just two - electronic and personal, which would eliminate the method most people use. I’d like to amend to allow mail as one option. I have people in my district without computers which would nullify their right to vote.
Chugach Rep: If all we wanted to do was just get it passed this year, perhaps. But here’s my concern. Whats the advantage of electronic transmission. One advantage is money saved. One way from people who don’t get a packet, just electronic. Perhaps we ease this. step 1. We mail all for a few years. 2. We mail if you don’t tells us not to. 3. Then we only mail to people who ask for it.
Corollary - Alaska Permanent Fund - we all were mailed a packet. Then you can go onliine. And now, no packet. They say “Go online. If you want it mailed , let us know.
I don’t want to be required to mail everyone forever. Our goal is to have an election that can withstand a challenge. If we eliminated mail right away, we would be challneged and we’d probably lose. I can only speak for Chugach.
Gruenberg: NOte that says resolution needs to go to court rather than the RCA. I think we should use RCA which has more expertise. How would coops feel?
Chugach Rep: This statement is not strictly to electronic. Fact is that RCA doesn not have jurisdiction over our elections today. If a member has a problem with an election today and for past 44 years, they take it to court system now. This would be a dramatic departure.
Lynn: What’s the typical turnout?
Chugach Rep: Last three elections - about 21% or roughly 14,000 votes cast per year. For a coop election, that is pretty good. Many get much lower. Single digits. For better or worse, Chugach gets a lot of attention and interest. Board would like to see more people participate, particularly younger people. Electronic might help. Also, looking at PFD, this may provide us a savings. Two lower 48 coops said, no increase in voting, no survey, so we don’t know. But had no problems with security.
Petersen: Many businesses allow customers to pay online. Have to set up username, password, etc. If you had that set up, wouldn’t be too big a stretch to let them vote electronically. I imagine Chugach does.
Chugach Rep: Thru the chair, you are correct. Can pay bills online. Some don’t even want paper. Security? Day one, we’d gone thru same drill about how someone might try to scam us electronically. Got to where we were comfortable. Banks were way ahead. Many of those lessons will translate to electronic voting.
Petersen: I expect even more convenient in rural areas where members spread over wide area. Especially since we’re getting broadband in two areas that previously didn’t have it.
Mr. Rich Gazaway RCA:
9:00 am Close public testimony.
Seaton: Penalty for voter fraud in coop election would be similar, felony, for other elections. Dept of Law?
Mr. Courtney? Mike Cor… Dept. of Law, not here for this bill, but I could get back to you on this question.
Lynn: Did this come up in the other house?
Seaton: It’s of interest to me Mr. Chair, but won’t hold up now.
Wilson: Don’t want to hold it up either, but something we want to know. Anything in here about a penalty for fraud?
Chugach Rep: Unaware of criminal penalties for fraud in coop election. Also unaware of penalty in state or local election.
Wilson: Something the coops need to think about. What are you going to do?
Chugach Rep: Chugach since 1948. We had potential for fraud since then. Last 20 years, the possibility has been there. It does cause us all stop and think about how someone will scam you. I’m sure there are people out there who will think about how can they make mischief, just as they thought that about paper elections. I would say that in my time supervising the ection we haven’t had anything to cause us to cite someone for fraud.
Wilson: I think it probably, because we are oving into new world, doing things different, more on interenet, it behooves your organization to think about this. I just heard today the person who got into Palin’s blackberry is going to trial. Just a kid, a college kid. People more into that now.
Seaton: Of interest to me because of the new technology, if a criminal penalty, it alleviates the chance of people on a lark going in. If there is that it will go to court, and coops will be stringent looking after their systems.
[Photo: Chugach Rep after testimony]
[Real issue not faking a ballot, but hacking the system and how it counts the votes.]
Johnson: Similar to Seaton. Five years ago id theft not an issue. As things change, might be wise of us. Not up to coop to make it criminal. It’s up to us. What’s at stake 45 years ago in a Chugach election compared to today is miles apart. Penalties can serve as deterrants, lot at stake and big penalty, may deter someone. Wise for legislature to look at the deterrent aspect. Not the issue of this bill.
petersen:
Gruenberg: Election Code penalties for voting in name of another or vote several times - apply to government elections, not coops or corporate elections. I found nothing on either of those provisions.
9:14am moved. Passes from committee.
9:17: HB 400 VIOLENT CRIMES EMERGENCY COMPENSATION TELECONFERENCED*
Nancy Manly (Staff to Rep. Lynn): Increases amount from $1500 to $3500. Hasn’t changed since 1975. Old figure isn’t enough to cover costs, like first/last months rent. This is deducted from final award given victims, which is capped at $40,000.
Briar Hopkins, staff to Sen. Joe Thomas.
Gives history of the program. This year 24 emergency cases awarded for $29,000. Used for relocation and counseling. ??
Administrator of Violent Crime Compensation Board: 478 claims, 22 by emergency awards in 2009. $1500 limit is really affecting emergency relocation.
Johnson: Would you go ver the process.
Ad: I review claim, that basic crime met - police report.
Johnson: Board meets five times a year?
Ad: I send precise of event and send it to them.
Johnson: ???
Ad: three board members have to respond to me by phone or email to say yes for emergency and at next board for further award.
Lynn: How long for victims to get money?
Ad: 24 hours, then depends on how quickly check can get thru - 5-7 working days.
Gatto: Wonder, ever get scammed, and then say, how do we get the money back.
Ad: We seek to avoid, application form, claimant sign they will have to repay if they get money from another source (insurance). We are only going to award emergency if it looks clear cut. I can’t say it never happens, but extremely unlikely.
Gatto: Peoeple deserving easy, broke, and victim, what about people with money?
Ad: Board has statues by which board can make the awards. Also, federal statute says board is last resort. Board cannot make award for pain and suffering.
Gatto: Concern back then, do you have enough money? We’re reluctant to ad another category. You run out of money? PFD’s from felons?
Ad: We haven’t run out of money. We’ve had sufficient money. Also federal grants, we get 60 cents for every dollar we spend.
Petersen: We are concentrating on stopping domestic violence. Are a lot victims because scene of dv?
Ad: Yes, it is a large proportion of claims, but don’t have figures at hand. Less than 50%. Emergency is very often sexual assault dv victim.
Petersen: It could take a week for a person to get a check, person needs relocation, week would seem like a long time, are you able to expedite.
Ad: I agree, unfortunately we are limited by check processing. We can ask for it to be expedited. In extreme there are shelters.
Mr. Godfrey online: Violent Crime Compensation Board. Jerry Godfrey chair of the comp. board. We’ve sought increase because when board created in 72 was $500, 75 raised to $1500, which equals $6000 today. To rise to level of emergency has to be for lost wages, mental health counseling, relocation. We have about 5 emergency awards to ten between meetings, typically dv, have to cooperate with law enforcement, moment of opportunity to get person convicted, we have to take advantage of that if they want out. If we don’t get them out, they will backtrack on cooperation. BF says, when I make bail I will kil you. Affects mental health and personal safety. Generally, minors involved. Get female and children out. Of late, just a female with no children to get enough to get first and last month, or a plane ticket out of Nome or Fairbanks to Juneau. Times of the essence, Admin spoke well.
Victim of fraud? I’d say twice in our tenure. We’ve made policy. We realized award not used as it should have been.
Lynn: When you relocate, place is confidential.
Godfrey: We ask them to make a plan. If they ask for ticket to Vegas or Hawaii, it won’t happen They have to have support system. confidential on our part, but we can’t control if she reveals in a couple of weeks. When you have dv person, it’s our window of opportuity to get her cooperation to prosecute. We have to take advantage of that when she feels most willing to cooperate. We’ll get her out of there as quick as possible. There’s not much turning back, it happens. When you get them to take tht gigantic step. they are resovlved and they aren’t going back. And will try to maintain their location as a mystery to the abuser.
Lynn: Anyone
Wilson: Thank you. Looking at chart for 2009, violent crimes new claims received. Most came from anchorage, area, Juneau. Some areas that are very small but have had a lot of violent crime claims. I’m wondering have you been able to look at an area and say, this may be the reason, able to make some assumptions because of it.
Godfrey: Can only do so empirically, Haven’t tasked our staff to analyze the data, we could if that’s something you’d like to see. We note that with a number of places, look at types of crime. Places underrepresented - I grew up out of Kodiak - fishermen tend to get rowdy. I think Kodiak is underrepresented. Are they under reported? I don’t know. We can look at Ketchikan, comparable, volumn is higher than I would expect looking at the rest of the state and types of crimes pretty severe - physical assault, battery or worse. Wow, another of those from bethel. Maybe victims are learning about us in one area, but in another area they don’t know about us. We do note that - communities underrepresented. Not a bad things if they aren’t victims. We’d love to go out of business
Wilson: i know you can’t make hard assumptions, but when we go on to budgets, we try to think about what we can do in prevention. If you can say - in this area, etc. basically from same family, or alcohol, drugs, etc. It would be interesting to know.
Ad: We had tasked the admin. a couple of years ago. We have a wealth of data about crime and victimization and substantiation through police reports. We had a request to comply any related to alcohol so we could list % claims that reflected sex crimes, alcohol, and two other categories. Did for our own sake, but didn’t have way to publicize it except for our annual report.
Johnson: If someone goes to a shelter, are they (shelter) compensated or is isn't strictly for individual.?
Godfrey: no, we don’t compensate shelters, that’s why they’re there. I don’t think we have the authority.
Johnson: Thank you, and that was the right answer in my opinion.
9:48: bill moves
9:50 Lynn: + HB 348 PERSONNEL BOARD MEMBERSHIP TELECONFERENCED*
Sica: (Staff to Rep. Lynn) increases membership from 3-5 members, modifies selection process to create a layer of insulation, without hampering gov’s power to appoint the board. Three members isn’t a lot on any board. Gov. makes choice of three nominees from Chief Justice. 3 members from party with most votes in last election. More independence when making judgments when considering complaints about the Gov, AG, etc.
Chief Justice appoint through rejectable lists, retains govs power to point. Two different parties
SEc. 2: Conforming change not more than 3 can be of the same party.
SEc. 3: Conflict section. APOC like, but less restrictive, things can’t do
SEc. 4. Conforming - raise numbers for quorum
Stay til finished with term. w/i 60 days, SC justice submits 6 names for two openings.
Alpheus Bullard (report cited by Sica) any time you change something like this you raise constitutional questions about balance of power between gov and legislator, He says it goes this way and that, and can’t say which way it goes.
STate Alaska Website Personnel board described as independent agency appointed by the governor. This will help board, complainant, public perception. APOC - four of the member of APOC two each come from central committee of the two highest powers and fifth recommended by the other four to the gov. We have a rejectable list.
Lynn: You think Chief Justice might trump the impartiality…?
Seaton: p. 2 line 15 Assist lobbyists - you mean for contributions?
Sica: language identical APOC statute - one of the prohibited behaviors. Doesn’t answer your question, already in law.
Seaton: I’d like committee to look at that, whether language too broad.
Petersen: Fiscal note - zero. Wondering when they meet, don’t they travel? Wouldn’t that be an additonal expense.
Sica: Looking at number of meetings. I don’t know how many meetings - they establish theiry own procedures. Good question.
Lynn: intent to help erase the perception of the fox watching the chickens. we want to hep insulate the governor from these types of situations. I don’t think it will happen again, I want to apologize to dept. of Law that waited patiently through a this with their four bills.
Hold HB 348 to next state affairs committee meeting. Don’t have Tuesday schedule together. Will tyr to put this first in line Tuesday. We’re getting close to having to have Sat. Sessions. Prepare for the next Saturday.
10:01 adjourned.
(H)STATE AFFAIRS | STANDING COMMITTEE * | ||||
Mar 11 Thursday 8:00 AM | CAPITOL 106 | ||||
+ | HB 336 | ELECTRIC & TELEPHONE COOPERATIVES' VOTING | TELECONFERENCED | ||
Moved CSHB 336(STA) Out of Committee | |||||
*+ | HB 400 | VIOLENT CRIMES EMERGENCY COMPENSATION | TELECONFERENCED | ||
Moved Out of Committee | |||||
*+ | HB 348 | PERSONNEL BOARD MEMBERSHIP | TELECONFERENCED | ||
Heard & Held | |||||
*+ | HB 349 | SUICIDE PREVENTION COUNCIL MEETINGS | TELECONFERENCED | ||
Moved Out of Committee | |||||
+ | Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled | TELECONFERENCED | |||
=+ | HB 251 | PRIORITY OF TOWING LIENS | TELECONFERENCED | ||
Moved Out of Committee |
- Over an hour was spent discussing whether Telephone and Electric Coops should be allowed to go to electronic voting.
- The Board that pays compensation for crime victims in need was requesting the emergency funds that can be paid between board meetings be increased from $1500 to $3500. Much of this is used by victims of domestic and sexual violence. The amount hasn't changed since 1975 and, they said, isn't enough for first and last month's rent for someone who needs to relocate immediately.
- HB 348 is intended to increase the size of the Personnel Board from three to five and to change how the members are appointed. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court would offer three candidates to the Governor who could reject them, if I got that right. The basic motivation for this bill as I understood it was:
Following the public perception of the Personnel Board hearings on former Gov. Sarah Palin: - Make this a legislative decision, rather than an executive branch decision. That pulls it away from people making up the rules that police themselves.
- Enlarge the committee - three people is too small. If one person is absent, it's a major loss.
- Add the Supreme Court to dilute some of the power of the Governor over people who will possibly consider charges against the Governor.
I believe there were some constitutional questions raised regarding separation of powers, but the attorney's opinion (Alpheus Bullard) seemed to say half a dozen of one and six of the other.
And that's as far as they got by 10am. There had been a Saturday session scheduled this week, but it was canceled. A lot of constituent meetings are scheduled for Anchorage this week, and maybe other places as well. But Chair Lynn said that since we're into the second half of the session and lots of work remains to be done, expect a Saturday session next week.
Here are my rough notes from the meeting. I wasn't going to post them, but something's strange with the Gavel to Gavel. I know they had some server problems. But now it looks like stuff is up, but it doesn't give the embeddable format it had before and the downloads are cfm, not mp3 any more. So maybe it's just still down. So STANDARD WARNING; NOTES ARE VERY ROUGH, USE AS AN APPROXIMATION OF WHAT WAS SAID AT THE MEETING.
[Photo: Window view at State Affairs hearing]
8:33: [I came in midstream, things were scheduled to begin at 8am]
Gatto: I’m looking how to scam the system, those techies know how to do this.
Chugach Rep: - Can’t answer every question about the what ifs.
Gatto: Why not both a paper and electronic ballot.
Chugach Rep: What happens the machine stuffs the ballot in the envelope, accidentally, stuffs in two. The outgoing process. On return can only send one ballot. Your name gets stamped now when the ballot comes in and if we get another one we know we already have one. Everyone can cast in person. We have procedures to make sure that they haven’t voted by mail and come in. Also people who think they voted, but they didn’t sign the envelope. If they show up, we give them a ballot.
Gatto: What if someone mails a ballot for Candidate A, eletronic for B, and personal for C. Would you investigate for fraud?
Chugach Rep: It happens ½ dozen times a year where machine jams or something happens and a person votes more than once. “Here’s an envelope that contains two ballots, which one do you want to select?” The committee makes a decision. You’d think they would be identical. Usually they are. Once or twice in my 20 years they were different.
Committee makes its own decision about how such ballots are counted.
Gatto: It’s one ballot per household right?
Chugach Rep: One per member. A single person can have a membership. Married couple can share a membership. Safeway - corp - has
Gatto: My wife gets a mail ballot and I counter her vote by voting electronically.
Chugach Rep: We have procedure - we used to have if we get two ballots, the first one counts. More recently I think it’s the last balot that counts. Committees rationalize differently. My goal is to have an election that survives any challenge.
Gruenberg: three lines of Q
1. Sponsor statement MTA have voted to allow new by laws to allow this voting. In process, before implementation can take place Legislature must amend to allow this. So no one has started this?
Chugach Rep: as far as I know no one has begun this, tho MTA and Chugach have voted to change
2. “Excpet that electronic transmission will not be the only way a person can vote:” Technically, you could have just two - electronic and personal, which would eliminate the method most people use. I’d like to amend to allow mail as one option. I have people in my district without computers which would nullify their right to vote.
Chugach Rep: If all we wanted to do was just get it passed this year, perhaps. But here’s my concern. Whats the advantage of electronic transmission. One advantage is money saved. One way from people who don’t get a packet, just electronic. Perhaps we ease this. step 1. We mail all for a few years. 2. We mail if you don’t tells us not to. 3. Then we only mail to people who ask for it.
Corollary - Alaska Permanent Fund - we all were mailed a packet. Then you can go onliine. And now, no packet. They say “Go online. If you want it mailed , let us know.
I don’t want to be required to mail everyone forever. Our goal is to have an election that can withstand a challenge. If we eliminated mail right away, we would be challneged and we’d probably lose. I can only speak for Chugach.
Gruenberg: NOte that says resolution needs to go to court rather than the RCA. I think we should use RCA which has more expertise. How would coops feel?
Chugach Rep: This statement is not strictly to electronic. Fact is that RCA doesn not have jurisdiction over our elections today. If a member has a problem with an election today and for past 44 years, they take it to court system now. This would be a dramatic departure.
Lynn: What’s the typical turnout?
Chugach Rep: Last three elections - about 21% or roughly 14,000 votes cast per year. For a coop election, that is pretty good. Many get much lower. Single digits. For better or worse, Chugach gets a lot of attention and interest. Board would like to see more people participate, particularly younger people. Electronic might help. Also, looking at PFD, this may provide us a savings. Two lower 48 coops said, no increase in voting, no survey, so we don’t know. But had no problems with security.
Petersen: Many businesses allow customers to pay online. Have to set up username, password, etc. If you had that set up, wouldn’t be too big a stretch to let them vote electronically. I imagine Chugach does.
Chugach Rep: Thru the chair, you are correct. Can pay bills online. Some don’t even want paper. Security? Day one, we’d gone thru same drill about how someone might try to scam us electronically. Got to where we were comfortable. Banks were way ahead. Many of those lessons will translate to electronic voting.
Petersen: I expect even more convenient in rural areas where members spread over wide area. Especially since we’re getting broadband in two areas that previously didn’t have it.
Mr. Rich Gazaway RCA:
9:00 am Close public testimony.
Seaton: Penalty for voter fraud in coop election would be similar, felony, for other elections. Dept of Law?
Mr. Courtney? Mike Cor… Dept. of Law, not here for this bill, but I could get back to you on this question.
Lynn: Did this come up in the other house?
Seaton: It’s of interest to me Mr. Chair, but won’t hold up now.
Wilson: Don’t want to hold it up either, but something we want to know. Anything in here about a penalty for fraud?
Chugach Rep: Unaware of criminal penalties for fraud in coop election. Also unaware of penalty in state or local election.
Wilson: Something the coops need to think about. What are you going to do?
Chugach Rep: Chugach since 1948. We had potential for fraud since then. Last 20 years, the possibility has been there. It does cause us all stop and think about how someone will scam you. I’m sure there are people out there who will think about how can they make mischief, just as they thought that about paper elections. I would say that in my time supervising the ection we haven’t had anything to cause us to cite someone for fraud.
Wilson: I think it probably, because we are oving into new world, doing things different, more on interenet, it behooves your organization to think about this. I just heard today the person who got into Palin’s blackberry is going to trial. Just a kid, a college kid. People more into that now.
Seaton: Of interest to me because of the new technology, if a criminal penalty, it alleviates the chance of people on a lark going in. If there is that it will go to court, and coops will be stringent looking after their systems.
[Photo: Chugach Rep after testimony]
[Real issue not faking a ballot, but hacking the system and how it counts the votes.]
Johnson: Similar to Seaton. Five years ago id theft not an issue. As things change, might be wise of us. Not up to coop to make it criminal. It’s up to us. What’s at stake 45 years ago in a Chugach election compared to today is miles apart. Penalties can serve as deterrants, lot at stake and big penalty, may deter someone. Wise for legislature to look at the deterrent aspect. Not the issue of this bill.
petersen:
Gruenberg: Election Code penalties for voting in name of another or vote several times - apply to government elections, not coops or corporate elections. I found nothing on either of those provisions.
9:14am moved. Passes from committee.
9:17: HB 400 VIOLENT CRIMES EMERGENCY COMPENSATION TELECONFERENCED*
Nancy Manly (Staff to Rep. Lynn): Increases amount from $1500 to $3500. Hasn’t changed since 1975. Old figure isn’t enough to cover costs, like first/last months rent. This is deducted from final award given victims, which is capped at $40,000.
Briar Hopkins, staff to Sen. Joe Thomas.
Gives history of the program. This year 24 emergency cases awarded for $29,000. Used for relocation and counseling. ??
Administrator of Violent Crime Compensation Board: 478 claims, 22 by emergency awards in 2009. $1500 limit is really affecting emergency relocation.
Johnson: Would you go ver the process.
Ad: I review claim, that basic crime met - police report.
Johnson: Board meets five times a year?
Ad: I send precise of event and send it to them.
Johnson: ???
Ad: three board members have to respond to me by phone or email to say yes for emergency and at next board for further award.
Lynn: How long for victims to get money?
Ad: 24 hours, then depends on how quickly check can get thru - 5-7 working days.
Gatto: Wonder, ever get scammed, and then say, how do we get the money back.
Ad: We seek to avoid, application form, claimant sign they will have to repay if they get money from another source (insurance). We are only going to award emergency if it looks clear cut. I can’t say it never happens, but extremely unlikely.
Gatto: Peoeple deserving easy, broke, and victim, what about people with money?
Ad: Board has statues by which board can make the awards. Also, federal statute says board is last resort. Board cannot make award for pain and suffering.
Gatto: Concern back then, do you have enough money? We’re reluctant to ad another category. You run out of money? PFD’s from felons?
Ad: We haven’t run out of money. We’ve had sufficient money. Also federal grants, we get 60 cents for every dollar we spend.
Petersen: We are concentrating on stopping domestic violence. Are a lot victims because scene of dv?
Ad: Yes, it is a large proportion of claims, but don’t have figures at hand. Less than 50%. Emergency is very often sexual assault dv victim.
Petersen: It could take a week for a person to get a check, person needs relocation, week would seem like a long time, are you able to expedite.
Ad: I agree, unfortunately we are limited by check processing. We can ask for it to be expedited. In extreme there are shelters.
Mr. Godfrey online: Violent Crime Compensation Board. Jerry Godfrey chair of the comp. board. We’ve sought increase because when board created in 72 was $500, 75 raised to $1500, which equals $6000 today. To rise to level of emergency has to be for lost wages, mental health counseling, relocation. We have about 5 emergency awards to ten between meetings, typically dv, have to cooperate with law enforcement, moment of opportunity to get person convicted, we have to take advantage of that if they want out. If we don’t get them out, they will backtrack on cooperation. BF says, when I make bail I will kil you. Affects mental health and personal safety. Generally, minors involved. Get female and children out. Of late, just a female with no children to get enough to get first and last month, or a plane ticket out of Nome or Fairbanks to Juneau. Times of the essence, Admin spoke well.
Victim of fraud? I’d say twice in our tenure. We’ve made policy. We realized award not used as it should have been.
Lynn: When you relocate, place is confidential.
Godfrey: We ask them to make a plan. If they ask for ticket to Vegas or Hawaii, it won’t happen They have to have support system. confidential on our part, but we can’t control if she reveals in a couple of weeks. When you have dv person, it’s our window of opportuity to get her cooperation to prosecute. We have to take advantage of that when she feels most willing to cooperate. We’ll get her out of there as quick as possible. There’s not much turning back, it happens. When you get them to take tht gigantic step. they are resovlved and they aren’t going back. And will try to maintain their location as a mystery to the abuser.
Lynn: Anyone
Wilson: Thank you. Looking at chart for 2009, violent crimes new claims received. Most came from anchorage, area, Juneau. Some areas that are very small but have had a lot of violent crime claims. I’m wondering have you been able to look at an area and say, this may be the reason, able to make some assumptions because of it.
Godfrey: Can only do so empirically, Haven’t tasked our staff to analyze the data, we could if that’s something you’d like to see. We note that with a number of places, look at types of crime. Places underrepresented - I grew up out of Kodiak - fishermen tend to get rowdy. I think Kodiak is underrepresented. Are they under reported? I don’t know. We can look at Ketchikan, comparable, volumn is higher than I would expect looking at the rest of the state and types of crimes pretty severe - physical assault, battery or worse. Wow, another of those from bethel. Maybe victims are learning about us in one area, but in another area they don’t know about us. We do note that - communities underrepresented. Not a bad things if they aren’t victims. We’d love to go out of business
Wilson: i know you can’t make hard assumptions, but when we go on to budgets, we try to think about what we can do in prevention. If you can say - in this area, etc. basically from same family, or alcohol, drugs, etc. It would be interesting to know.
Ad: We had tasked the admin. a couple of years ago. We have a wealth of data about crime and victimization and substantiation through police reports. We had a request to comply any related to alcohol so we could list % claims that reflected sex crimes, alcohol, and two other categories. Did for our own sake, but didn’t have way to publicize it except for our annual report.
Johnson: If someone goes to a shelter, are they (shelter) compensated or is isn't strictly for individual.?
Godfrey: no, we don’t compensate shelters, that’s why they’re there. I don’t think we have the authority.
Johnson: Thank you, and that was the right answer in my opinion.
9:48: bill moves
9:50 Lynn: + HB 348 PERSONNEL BOARD MEMBERSHIP TELECONFERENCED*
Sica: (Staff to Rep. Lynn) increases membership from 3-5 members, modifies selection process to create a layer of insulation, without hampering gov’s power to appoint the board. Three members isn’t a lot on any board. Gov. makes choice of three nominees from Chief Justice. 3 members from party with most votes in last election. More independence when making judgments when considering complaints about the Gov, AG, etc.
Chief Justice appoint through rejectable lists, retains govs power to point. Two different parties
SEc. 2: Conforming change not more than 3 can be of the same party.
SEc. 3: Conflict section. APOC like, but less restrictive, things can’t do
SEc. 4. Conforming - raise numbers for quorum
Stay til finished with term. w/i 60 days, SC justice submits 6 names for two openings.
Alpheus Bullard (report cited by Sica) any time you change something like this you raise constitutional questions about balance of power between gov and legislator, He says it goes this way and that, and can’t say which way it goes.
STate Alaska Website Personnel board described as independent agency appointed by the governor. This will help board, complainant, public perception. APOC - four of the member of APOC two each come from central committee of the two highest powers and fifth recommended by the other four to the gov. We have a rejectable list.
Lynn: You think Chief Justice might trump the impartiality…?
Seaton: p. 2 line 15 Assist lobbyists - you mean for contributions?
Sica: language identical APOC statute - one of the prohibited behaviors. Doesn’t answer your question, already in law.
Seaton: I’d like committee to look at that, whether language too broad.
Petersen: Fiscal note - zero. Wondering when they meet, don’t they travel? Wouldn’t that be an additonal expense.
Sica: Looking at number of meetings. I don’t know how many meetings - they establish theiry own procedures. Good question.
Lynn: intent to help erase the perception of the fox watching the chickens. we want to hep insulate the governor from these types of situations. I don’t think it will happen again, I want to apologize to dept. of Law that waited patiently through a this with their four bills.
Hold HB 348 to next state affairs committee meeting. Don’t have Tuesday schedule together. Will tyr to put this first in line Tuesday. We’re getting close to having to have Sat. Sessions. Prepare for the next Saturday.
10:01 adjourned.
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