One-sentence summaries of all prefiled bills so far in the Legislature

Here’s an early look at what the Alaska Legislature will address once it convenes in the capitol on Jan. 17.

[Permanent Fund and spending cap are highlights of Legislature’s ‘preseason’]

SENATE

SB 1: Spends $666.4 million from the Permanent Fund to pay the portion of the Dividend vetoed by Gov. Walker in 2016. (SB 1 and SB 2 are two halves because appropriating money from the Permanent Fund and paying that money out are two separate actions.)

SB 2: Pays out the $666.4 million appropriated in SB 1 as a supplemental dividend to each eligible Alaskan.

SB 3: Exempts ferry construction from the state’s “percent for art” program and gives ferries an alternative way to meet sewage discharge standards.

SB 4: A barber doesn’t have to be tested on bleaching, dying or waving hair if the barber applies for a special license that doesn’t allow those practices.

SB 5: Legislators can’t bypass the spirit of campaign finance regulations by setting up personal political action committees.

SB 6: Industrial hemp is not a controlled substance.

SB 7: Creates (but doesn’t fund) a museum renovation and construction grant program. (Sen. Stevens, who prefiled this, tried the same bill as SB 61 last Legislature.)

SB 8: Pick.Click.Give. can give money to tribal governments as well as charities.

SB 9: Expands the use of “military facility zones” designed to help military development, to areas without an incorporated municipality.

SB 10: Medicaid will pay for home care, and the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services allows adult foster care homes, where a home cares on a 24-hour basis for up to three disabled adults.

SB 11: It’s easier for the state to allow an antlerless moose hunt.

SB 12: Establishes a school tax on residents and nonresidents earning money in the state.

SB 13: Legislators can’t collect per diem payments for food or housing starting in the 91st day of the session unless they’ve already passed an operating budget for the year.

SB 14: Allows Uber, Lyft and similar companies to operate in Alaska.

 

SJR 1: This is a constitutional amendment that would protect the account that pays Permanent Fund Dividends and require them to be paid as they were in 2013.

 

HOUSE

HB 1: Alaskans can register to vote on Election Day.

HB 2: Employers can prefer veterans when hiring.

HB 3: An employer must give someone time off to serve in the National Guard, even if they’re a member of the National Guard in another state.

HB 4: Expands the use of “military facility zones” designed to help military development, to areas without an incorporated municipality.

HB 5: The spouses and children of a firefighter or police officer who is killed on the job can continue to receive health insurance.

HB 6: Creates the Jonesville Public Use Area near Sutton on vacant state-owned land.

HB 7: It’s OK to take a ballot “selfie.”

HB 8: Law enforcement is required to enforce a protective order issued Outside as long as it appears authentic.

HB 9: The Alaska Board of Pharmacy regulates drug wholesalers that ship medical drugs into the state.

HB 10: When the Office of Children’s Services takes a child away from his or her parents, OCS has to consider whether the removal is likely to “result in serious emotional or physical damage.”

HB 11: Public employees and teachers can take early retirement (up to three years early) through 2020.

HB 12: The Office of Children’s Services can only take custody of a child (unless there’s an emergency) with a court order.

HB 13: Alaska will not participate in any federal effort to register Americans on the grounds of race or religion.

HB 14: The Legislature gets more say on Pebble Mine.

HB 15: Replaces the terms “husband” and “wife” in state statutes.

HB 16: Police must be trained to recognize and appropriately deal with people who have disabilities.

HB 17: Creates a fund to collect donations from people who want to support the Alaska Department of Fish and Game but don’t like predator control.

HB 18: The Ketchikan Chamber of Commerce’s “Race to Alaska” can operate a lottery.

HB 19: A type of pesticide called a neonicotinoid cannot be used outside.

HB 20: Any elected office-holder can make a marriage official in Alaska.

HB 21: Spends $666.4 million from the Permanent Fund to pay the portion of the Dividend vetoed by Gov. Walker in 2016. (HB 21 and HB22 are two halves because appropriating money from the Permanent Fund and paying that money out are two separate actions.)

HB 22: Pays out the $666.4 million appropriated in HB 21 as a supplemental dividend to each eligible Alaskan.

HB 23: The spouses and children of a firefighter or police officer who is killed on the job can continue to receive health insurance.

HB 24: A designer drug called U-47700 is on the schedule of illegal drugs.

HB 25: Health insurance has to cover birth control.

HB 26: Employers have to provide scheduled breaks for nursing mothers.

HB 27: State agencies have to publish a list of chemicals likely to harm children, and three specific flame-retardant chemicals are forbidden.

HB 28: Makeup (and other cosmetics) has to list its ingredients on the packaging.

HB 29: Genetically modified fish can’t be sold in Alaska.

HB 30: Employers must provide paid sick leave.

HB 31: Alaska police have to list how many untested “rape kits” they have, and the Alaska Department of Public Safety has to give a full accounting.

HB 32: Genetically engineered food must be labeled.

HB 33: May 31 each year is “Katie John Day.”

 

HJR 1: Calls for a constitutional amendment reversing Alaska’s previous constitutional amendment defining marriage as between one man and one woman.

HJR 2: Proposes a constitutional amendment setting a spending limit in the Alaska Constitution at $4 billion in operating expenses per year, adjusted for inflation and population each year from 2017 onward.

HJR 3: Calls for a constitutional amendment setting the Legislative session’s length at 90 days instead of 121 days.

More in News

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Aurora forecast for the week of April 15

These forecasts are courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute… Continue reading

Rep. Sara Hannan (right) offers an overview of this year’s legislative session to date as Rep. Andi Story and Sen. Jesse Kiehl listen during a town hall by Juneau’s delegation on Thursday evening at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Multitude of education issues, budget, PFD among top areas of focus at legislative town hall

Juneau’s three Democratic lawmakers reassert support of more school funding, ensuring LGBTQ+ rights.

Rosemary Ahtuangaruak, mayor of the Inupiaq village of Nuiqsut, at the area where a road to the Willow project will be built in the North Slope of Alaska, March 23, 2023. The Interior Department said it will not permit construction of a 211-mile road through the park, which a mining company wanted for access to copper deposits. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times)
Biden shields millions of acres of Alaskan wilderness from drilling and mining

The Biden administration expanded federal protections across millions of acres of Alaskan… Continue reading

Allison Gornik plays the lead role of Alice during a rehearsal Saturday of Juneau Dance Theatre’s production of “Alice in Wonderland,” which will be staged at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé for three days starting Friday. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
An ‘Alice in Wonderland’ that requires quick thinking on and off your feet

Ballet that Juneau Dance Theatre calls its most elaborate production ever opens Friday at JDHS.

Caribou cross through Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve in their 2012 spring migration. A 211-mile industrial road that the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority wants to build would pass through Gates of the Arctic and other areas used by the Western Arctic Caribou Herd, one of the largest in North America. Supporters, including many Alaska political leaders, say the road would provide important economic benefits. Opponents say it would have unacceptable effects on the caribou. (Photo by Zak Richter/National Park Service)
Alaska’s U.S. senators say pending decisions on Ambler road and NPR-A are illegal

Expected decisions by Biden administration oppose mining road, support more North Slope protections.

Rep. Sarah Vance, R-Homer, speaks on the floor of the Alaska House of Representatives on Wednesday, March 13. (James Brooks/Alaska Beacon)
Alaska House members propose constitutional amendment to allow public money for private schools

After a court ruling that overturned a key part of Alaska’s education… Continue reading

Danielle Brubaker shops for homeschool materials at the IDEA Homeschool Curriculum Fair in Anchorage on Thursday. A court ruling struck down the part of Alaska law that allows correspondence school families to receive money for such purchases. (Claire Stremple/Alaska Beacon)
Lawmakers to wait on Alaska Supreme Court as families reel in wake of correspondence ruling

Cash allotments are ‘make or break’ for some families, others plan to limit spending.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Wednesday, April 17, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Newly elected tribal leaders are sworn in during the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska’s 89th annual Tribal Assembly on Thursday at Elizabeth Peratrovich Hall. (Photo courtesy of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)
New council leaders, citizen of year, emerging leader elected at 89th Tribal Assembly

Tlingit and Haida President Chalyee Éesh Richard Peterson elected unopposed to sixth two-year term.

Most Read