April 26, 2022
Alaskan Friends and Neighbors,
We can definitely see that spring has sprung and summer is just around the corner! In District F, people are swapping out their snowmachines for their four-wheelers!
Meanwhile, here in Juneau, people are getting their boats ready for the water down in the harbor, and up the hill on 4th Street at the Capitol, committees and floor sessions are getting busier as the deadline to wrap up approaches. Today is the 99th day in our are our constitutionally-limited session of 120 days.
Speaking of spring, we unanimously passed Senate Joint Resolution SJR 20; Urge Passage of Hearing Protection Act. We in Alaska spend a lot of our time outdoors and many of us hunt to supplement the food for our families. With inflation impacting our totals at the grocery store checkout, my guess is that fishing is going to become even more important this summer, and hunting will follow suit this fall.
Now back to SJR 20. Firearms are used all over our state during hunting season, and firearms can cause hearing damage and loss. We are urging the U.S. Congress to pass the Hearing Protection Act to remove firearms suppressors from National Firearms Act (NFA) regulations which would eliminate barriers to make them more easily accessible to use for hunting. The passage would also result in the largest increase of Pittman-Robertson funding in decades; these dollars would then be available to states for wildlife management.
Yesterday, we also passed HB 41 Shellfish Projects, HB 209 Emergency Firefighters, and HCR 2 Supporting Alaska Ocean Cluster which you can read about by clicking the links. The three pieces of legislation all passed unanimously.
Undoubtedly the most significant issue before the Senate this week which impacts all Alaskans is SB199. This bill changes the PFD formula in statute. As we’ve discussed many times, a change in statute does not necessarily mean that the statute will be followed in future years. The Wielechowski PFD court ruling put the decision for the annual PFD amount in the hands of each legislature. Since 2016, the decision has not been based on the formula in the statutes but on the will – and some might say whim – of the legislature.
Scroll down to see the main components of the PFD bill (SB199) that awaits a vote on the floor. If you don’t like what you see – that it prioritizes government spending over the PFD unless $800 million in new taxes are passed, you are not alone. I do not support the bill in its present form. I am working with my colleagues to ensure we have amendments on the Senate floor to allow for a fair PFD.
Before closing, I wanted to let you know about a great event in Palmer next Monday morning. The 6th Annual Drive Your Tractor to Work Day! Tractors and their drivers will begin gathering at the fairgrounds at 7:00 AM on Monday, May 2. At 8:30 AM, the parade of tractors will begin their drive through Palmer and conclude by the pavilion near the library for breakfast. If you’re out and about and see the tractor parade, please take some photos for me, will you? We sure love our farmers!
As always, our bill update section awaits you along with public testimony flyers, photos from this past week, and last night’s Facebook Live. You likely will have to expand the email at the bottom to see all the great items we’ve included this week.
Working on your behalf,
The slide above shows the PFD solution proposed by the Senate Finance Committee via Senate Bill 199 which is expected to go to the floor, likely late this week. As you may notice, this bill in its current form does not guarantee a full dividend and, in fact, predicates any potential full PFD payment on raising $800 million through new taxes.
I will not be supporting this bill in its current form and, instead, will be advocating for amendments on the floor as well as for a full PFD amount for this year in the budget. With inflation and high fuel and oil-heating prices during this post-covid period, along with surplus revenues due to increased per-barrel oil prices, if there ever were a time to tap our rainy day Permanent Fund earnings reserve account to help Alaskans, this is it.
Please note that there are sufficient incoming current revenues to pay for government this year without using the Permanent Fund earnings reserve draw if the legislature so chose.
In the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday, April 18, we worked on Senator Shower’s election integrity bill, SB 39 (into which my election bill, SB 43 was merged). SB 39 makes some long-overdue updates to our election statutes to provide election security, ballot accuracy, and transparency between the Division of Elections and the voters. Read more about how we are improving the election statutes in the article below. It’s all about making it easy to vote but hard to cheat!
Election integrity
Easy to vote, hard to cheat
Over the past few weeks in emails, phone calls, and discussions during Facebook Live, many of you have raised concerns regarding election integrity. I wanted to take a few paragraphs this week to tell you about what we have been working on around the Capitol to address some of the problems with our election system.
Some of the politicos among you may have noticed the Senate Judiciary Committee’s marathon meetings last week covering amendments to SB 39. SB 39, sponsored by Senator Shower, attempts to update our election and voting statutes for the first time in decades.
One of the prevalent concerns I have heard from constituents is the need to clean up the voter rolls. For those wondering, a voter roll is a list of persons who are entitled to vote in a particular election and jurisdiction. An accurate voter roll helps prevent duplicate ballots, ballots issued for deceased individuals, and ballots issued to individuals who are no longer residents or eligible to vote in Alaska. Additionally, it allows eligible voters to vote with a greater sense of confidence that their ballots will count.
Currently, the voter roll system operates by disqualifying and rejecting ballots that do not meet the statutory standards. Instead of focusing on disqualifying completed ballots, SB 39 takes a step back and evaluates the requirements for qualifying a ballot in the first place.
SB 39 strengthens the voter roll by requiring address confirmations and corrections be performed by the master register no less than yearly for voters whose mail from the division of elections was returned, who have not contacted the division for two years since the preceding examination of the voter registry, who did not vote in the two previous general elections, or who do not live in the state.
Additionally, SB 39 requires that individuals who request a ballot within 30 days of an election provide an affidavit stating whether they established residency at least 30 days before the date of the election, identification issued by the federal government, the state, municipality, a tribal government, or a secondary or post-secondary school that displays the applicants Alaska residence address, and a recently dated utility bill or similar document to verify the voter’s residence address. These documents are much like those required to apply for a Real ID at the DMV and will help to ensure that each potential voter is qualified to vote and only votes once.
SB 39 reinforces the accuracy of the voter roll by requiring signature verification and the appropriate training on signature matching equipment for election workers.
Another issue raised with the current election system in Alaska is the reliability of the ballots themselves. In order to have reliable ballots, SB 39 adds a new statutory requirement that an official ballot, including an electronic ballot, will contain a watermark, seal, or another security identifier. Furthermore, it prevents the Division of Elections from counting ballots that do not have a security identifier. This measure is intended to prevent fake and duplicate ballots.
Another improvement contained in SB 39 is comprehensive ballot tracking with notifications for voters. With these improvements, voters will be notified when their vote is received and counted. On the flip side, if an individual’s vote is not counted, they will be notified of the reason and provided instruction on how they can remedy the problem. Ballots with clerical issues such as where a voter forgot to sign will not face permanent disqualification as under current law. Rather, voters will be notified of a process for technical amendments to their ballots within an appropriate timeframe.
Finally, ballot chain of custody protocols are strengthened, as well as bar code tracking for ballots to maintain a more robust chain of custody when a ballot is out of the control of the Division of Elections. The bill provides for a process for instant “curing” if a voter makes a technical mistake that would have previously disqualified their vote.
Again, the bill aims to make it easy to vote, but hard to cheat.
Office Visitors
Alaska Farm Bureau President, Scott Mugrage (a farmer and rancher from the Delta area), and Executive Director, Amy Seitz, dropped by last Tuesday to discuss food security and agriculture! We discussed SB 242 Exemptions for Food Products. You can read the transmittal letter discussing the bill here, but in summary, the legislation would allow Alaskans to sell homemade foods and meat via animal shares to informed end consumers.
Dementia Awareness SB 216
Did you know that Alzheimer’s Disease is the ninth leading cause of death in Alaska according to the CDC? Furthermore, of the top ten leading causes of death, Alzheimer’s I the only one that cannot be cured or prevented. The CDC projects that the number of individuals nationwide living with Alzheimer’s will increase to by nearly 150% from 5.8 million to 14 million.
Graphic by Dementia Friendly Wyoming
With the severity and prevalence of this condition, it is all the more important that medical professionals are able to educate and treat individuals living with Alzheimer’s or other related dementias. The medically identified risk factors include overall physical health, genetics, and, most commonly known, age. Alaska has the fastest growing senior population per capita of any state in the union. With the ever-increasing rates of Alzheimer’s country-wide, the time is now to start putting education and researching to improve our ability to love and care for those diagnosed with this condition.
To this end, I have co-sponsored Senate Bill 216 entitled dementia awareness. As the sponsor of the bill, Senator Costello has noted that fewer than half of Americans living with Alzheimer’s receive a formal diagnosis. SB 216 addresses this issue by directing the establishment of a statewide dementia awareness program. This program would provide the public with education about early detection, diagnoses, and treatment of Alzheimer’s and related dementias.
Graphic by Glasgow Memory Clinic
As will any new state program, one of my first questions is how can we pay for it. In the case of a dementia awareness program for Alaska, significant federal funding and grants are available through the “Building Our Largest Dementia Infrastructure for Alzheimer’s Act,” known as the BOLD Act. Although the program would be at the state level, the Department of Health would seek funding through the federal government as the primary means of funding this program.
It is my hope that we can get SB 216 passed this session and begin addressing this mounting concern before it becomes a crisis. Although there are no known cures, I know from personal experience with extended family members that treatment can go a long way for those living with the condition. The bill has made good progress in the lower committees in the Senate and is now in its final committee of referral on the Senate side, the Finance Committee. If this topic is close to your heart, consider emailing your support to SFIN@akleg.gov.
SB 140 The Even Playing Field Act
UPDATE: SB 140 passed out of the Senate Education Committee with the full support of the Chair and the members present. Subsequently, the bill moved to the Rules Committee where it was awaiting a floor vote. Yesterday, the Senate Minority Leader, who opposes the bill, had the votes to secure a referral to the Judiciary Committee because some members of the Majority were absent. This is simply an attempt to slow-roll the bill by the opposition. Stay tuned for an update.
US Senator Stevens “Uncle Ted” fought for Title IX
for his daughters and for women and girls in Alaska
to ensure equality in sports.
Let’s preserve his legacy and pass SB 140.
Scroll down to the second photo to see what is displayed at the
Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport
near the bronze statute of our “Uncle Ted”,
US Senator Ted Stevens
(served from December 24, 1968 to January 3, 2009).
It’s time: for the sake of Alaska, the United States, and the world
U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan gave his annual address before the Senate and House during a special joint session on Tuesday, April 19th. He called on the Biden administration and the Secretary of Interior, Deb Haaland, to support Alaska by opening up the 1002 Area of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), supporting the Willow Project, and other energy projects within the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPR-A), approving the life-saving King Cove Road and approving the land allotments for Alaska Native Vietnam-era Veterans signed by President Trump.
In lieu of Secretary Haaland’s recent visit to Alaska, I led a bipartisan effort to send the joint letter below signed by various Senate and House majority leadership members which include Republicans, Democrats, and an Independent.
While my Democrat colleagues and I certainly have many areas of disagreement, I believe that this letter clearly sends a message to the federal government in general and the Department of Interior specifically. We stand united when it comes to the recognition of our rights and their responsibilities.
We expect the federal government to treat Alaska as an equal partner in land management decisions. We are united in expecting nothing less from Washington. As state legislators, we are closest to the people we serve and have the best understanding of their needs. Secretary Haaland’s meeting our request is the right thing to do for Alaskans. In addition, considering our proximity to Russia and a keen awareness of the current situation in the world, Alaska stands ready and eager to play a significant role in domestic energy production to assist the nation and our allies.
Update: The House passed an increase to the per-student funding; the consideration for this increase in education spending has yet to take place in the Senate.
Senate Community & Regional Affairs Committee Update
The Senate Community and Regional Affairs Committee passed out two bills on Tuesday, April 22.
First, HB 227 expands the municipal energy improvement program known as C-PACE to allow private lenders to provide loans to commercial property owners for energy improvements and resiliency projects including wind protection and snow load management. The improvement loans are attached to the property itself rather than the property and are based on a voluntary property assessment through the municipality. If the property transfers ownership, so does the loan for the property improvements.
Secondly, SB144 addresses Alaska’s disaster emergency statutes. Through the changes made in the Community and Regional Affairs Committee, we have established a means of remote participation and voting for the legislature in the event of a disaster emergency. We also addressed some of the concerns raised during the COVID-19 pandemic by limiting the Governor’s ability to extend or declare successive disaster emergencies for the same emergency. Under SB 144, the Governor would now need legislative approval to extend a disaster emergency beyond 30 days. We have also required economic impact assessments to be performed when disaster proclamations with provisions that violate constitutional rights are issued.
The flyer above was for a K-12 educators’ workshop open to teachers from the Anchorage School District. Teachers were offered a $3,000 stipend to attend a one-day workshop along with a $200 book stipend to attend this event. This is exactly why we need Senate Bill 196 relating to transparency and compelled speech in public education. We must establish protections and ensure that parental rights regarding the education of children are upheld. Anyone who thinks ideas implying that certain people, based on their skin color, either are inherently racist or are victims of racism, aren’t entering into our K-12 classrooms, this poster indicates otherwise.
OTHER OPPORTUNITIES
FOR YOU TO WEIGH IN THIS WEEK
Public Testimony
Below is list of bills scheduled to be heard in various committees this week. If you’d like to provide public testimony, plug the bill number (for example “HB 133”) into the search bar here to learn the date and time. Scroll down toward the bottom of this newsletter to find the public testimony call-in phone numbers.
PUBLIC TESTIMONY OPPORTUNITIES THIS WEEK
Below is a sampling. Click here to see the full list of bills.
In Health and Social Services on Tuesday, April 19, we heard from Scott Mugrage and Amy Seitz about SB 242 The Food Freedom Act which would aid in Alaskans’ ability to sell our homemade foodstuffs and meat via animal shares. This bill will help increase our food security.
As the volume of daily contacts reaching out to my office has exponentially increased over time, my staff stands by, ready to assist you. If you desire follow-up, feedback, a response to a question, etc., it’s always best to call the office. Below are direct phone numbers for my aides, or you can call the general number at 907-465-3743. |
For additional information,
contact my staff:
Buddy Whitt – Chief of Staff
-Senator’s Aide for Judiciary Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Judiciary Finance Subcommittee
-Senator’s Aide for Senate Floor
Buddy.Whitt@akleg.gov
907-465-5025
Daniel Phelps – Committee Aide
-Committee Aide for Community and Regional Affairs
-Senator’s Aide for Education Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Alaska Food & Farm Caucus
-Senator’s Aide for Administration Finance Subcommittee
Daniel.Phelps@akleg.gov
907-465-1172
Brent Bartlett – Legislative Aide
-Senator’s Aide for Health & Social Services Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Transportation Finance Subcommittee
-Senator’s Scheduler
Brent.Bartlett@akleg.gov
907-465-3743
Serving You in These Roles
Current Senate Committees:
- Community & Regional Affairs Committee, Chair
- Health & Social Services Committee, Vice-Chair
- Rules Committee, Member
- Judiciary Committee, Member
- Education Committee, Member
- Legislative Council Committee, Alternate
Finance Subcommittee Assignments:
- Senate Transportation & Public Facilities (Fin Sub), Member
- Senate Administration (Fin Sub), Member
- Senate Judiciary (Fin Sub), Member
Other Appointments:
- State Agriculture & Rural Leaders, Alaska Delegate
- Mat-Su Legislative Delegation, Member
- National Conference of State Legislatures – State Coordinator
- National Conference of State Legislatures – Law, Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee, Member
- National Conference of State Legislatures – Task Force on Cybersecurity, Member
- Council of State Governments – Transportation Committee, Member
- Council of State Governments West – Canada Relations Committee, Member
For information on bills I’m co‑sponsoring
click here.
For information on all bills filed during this session,
click here.
Passed Legislation
(Bills that are finished with the legislative process)
SB 27 – Industrial Hemp Program; Manufacturing- Many of you are aware that in 2018 I sponsored and the legislature passed SB6 allowing for the legalized growth and production of Industrial Hemp as an agricultural product in the Alaska. In late 2018 the US Congress passed the 2018 Farm Bill which made additional changes to the federal statutes regarding the production of industrial hemp. SB 27 makes a few small changes in Alaska statute in order to conform to those federal changes.
The bill was passed unanimously in the Senate and almost unanimously in the House (Representatives Eastman and Kurka were opposed to this bill). This summer the Governor signed the bill at the Alaska State Fair, and just a few weeks ago the United States Department of Agriculture approved the Alaska Industrial Hemp Plan so that Alaska can now grow, manufacture, and sell hemp and hemp products across jurisdictions. This is a great win for Alaska.
Legislation Update
(Shelley’s bills filed with your best interest in mind)
SB 41 – Health Insurance Info; Incentive Program. Also known as the Alaska Health Care Consumers Right to Shop Act. The Senate Labor & Commerce chair had planned to move the bill out so that we could report to you that the bill is currently in the Senate Finance Committee. Unfortunately, the meeting was canceled. SB41 will loosen up free-market principles to operate as they should in our healthcare market in Alaska. Providing an easy way for consumers to price compare through an online tool and offering an incentive via cashback for shared savings if the consumer chooses a provider who charges less than the average charge, this bill help reintroduce competition into a sector of our economy where it is now fairly non-existent. When it comes to healthcare, Alaska is not only the highest cost state in the nation, it is the highest cost location on the globe. This stifles economic growth in other sectors, overburdens Alaskan families and individuals, is taking dollars allocated to education away from instruction in our schools, and increases costs for local and state governments. Please send an email to Senate.Labor.and.Commerce@akleg.gov and ask the Chair to please reschedule the bill and to move it out.
SB 42 – Virtual and Early Education, Reading- The “Education Transformation Act” (now merged into Senate Education Committee SB 111) establishes proven reading instruction in our schools with the goal that children will learn to read well by third grade. It also establishes an online platform with a menu of classes and video samples in order to open up a larger variety of course offerings and teaching expertise to students statewide. Lastly, it provides for optional pre-K with a strong reading preparation component. Through extensive bi-partisan effort, SB 111 has officially passed out of the Senate and is on its way through House Committees.
SB 43 – Elections, Voting, Campaign Finance- “An Act relating to campaign finance and initiatives; relating to elections and voting; and relating to unlawful interference with voting”. SB 43 is about improving transparency and accountability in Alaska’s campaign finance laws as well as securing the integrity of Alaska’s election process. We were able to move the bill from the Senate State Affairs Committee to the Judiciary Committee but will not be requesting a hearing because the key pieces of the bill were incorporated into SB39, an election integrity bill by Senator Shower which we are currently working on in the Judiciary Committee.
SB 57 – “The Alaska Sunset Commission Act” will help ensure transparency, efficiency, cost-effectiveness, statutory alignment, and constitutional alignment in the operation of our state government. SB 57 establishes the Alaska Sunset Commission as an apolitical, independent, and objective entity charged with reviewing, via detailed and robust audits, each department by division in the state on a rotating schedule. This bill had its first hearing in Senate State Affairs on Tuesday, April 19.
SB 102 – Extending the Alaska membership in the Compact to advocate for an Article V Constitutional Convention for the purposes of advancing an amendment to the United States Constitution requiring a balanced budget. Alaska’s membership in this compact is set to expire this year, but with the passage of Senate Bill 102, Alaska would remain a member in the compact until 2031. The bill has been in the possession of the Senate Finance Committee since early April 2021 but has not been scheduled. Former Lt Governor Mead Treadwell is a big advocate for this legislation and is visiting with key members of the legislature, hoping to win support for the bill to move.
SB 140 – An Act relating to school athletics, recreation, athletic teams, and sports. The goal of SB 140 is to maintain the rights women fought for and gained in obtaining Title IX status in 1972. Before Title IX, 1 in 27 girls played sports. Today that number is 2 in 5. An excellent hearing was held more than four weeks ago with tremendous expert testimony. The Senate Education Committee heard nearly 4 hours of public testimony on SB 140 the following week. During a hearing on April 6, the Education Committee adopted several amendments that my office worked on in conjunction with the other members adding clarifying language, resolving some constitutional concerns, and providing intent language to the bill. Subsequently, the Education Committee passed the bill out of committee. The bill moved to the Rules Committee where it was awaiting a floor vote, but the Senate Minority Leader, who opposes the bill, had the votes to secure a referral to the Judiciary Committee because some members of the Majority were absent. This is simply an attempt to slow-roll the bill by the opposition. Stay tuned for an update.
SB 181 – Identification of Contractor in Ads – This bill amends the current statute to allow contractors to provide an internet website or landing page that contains their licensure and identification requirements rather than listing the details in the advertisement. This bill was moved out of the Senate Community and Regional Affairs Committee on February 23, 2022, and has since been awaiting a hearing in the Senate Labor and Commerce Committee which we hope will be soon.
SB 197 – Senate Bill 197 is my bill to allow Alaskans to enter Direct Health Care Agreements with doctors. Direct Health Care Agreement concepts are not new and have been adopted as a regular medical practice in 32 states with pending legislation in 12 others including Alaska. Direct Health Care agreements allow a patient to enter into an agreement for service with their healthcare provider for one annual fee and cover a myriad of preventative and regular healthcare without involving their medical insurance. These agreements remove some of the financial barriers patients encounter in accessing routine primary care, including preventive, wellness, and chronic care services. The bill is awaiting its companion bill to come over from the House to catch up with SB 197 in the Senate. The House bill will be the vehicle we hope goes to the Senate floor for a vote.
SB 217 – Current law allows concealed carry on school campuses in Alaska but only with the permission of the school superintendent. There are currently no other caveats beyond that. One of the reasons superintendents may not be allowing the carrying of concealed weapons is due to the lack of policy on what the training criteria should be considering the very unique school environment (where the ratio of children is greater than that of adults). Most do not realize that this training is not a standard part of police and trooper academies. Law enforcement officers (LEOs) who serve as school resources officers attend additional training specific to school environments. If LEOs require specialized training to work at schools to help increase safety for our precious children, then specialized training should be required for others conceal carrying in schools and they should be given a special job designation for that effort. The time and expense for their effort should be covered by the school district as well. SB 217 establishes the training criteria for school staff to conceal carry. With relatively few LEOs across great expanses of our state’s geography, the slow response time for a LEO at many schools in Alaska could result in a massive tragedy in the event of an active shooter. SB 217 offers a solution for school districts to be prepared so that the lives of students and staff can be saved in the event of such an incident. Our office is currently working to prepare amendments to adjust the wording of the bill to have the new language ready for the committee at the first hearing.
SJR 4 – Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Alaska relating to abortion. This bill will allow for the question of abortion to be decided through legislation or voter initiative. The bill was heard and passed out of the Senate Health and Social Services Committee and the Judiciary Committee is currently in the Senate Finance Committee. We are hopeful that the committee will hear the bill in the near future.
Join Shelley on Facebook Live each week to ask questions and give input.
We typically broadcast Mondays at 6:00 pm, but watch for a notification on Facebook as the day/time is subject to change.
Be sure to “like” the “Senator Shelley Hughes” Facebook page www.facebook.com/AKShelleyHughes
so you’ll get a heads-up each time we air!
Watch last night’s Facebook Live here:
HAVE A FEDERAL ISSUE???
Contact Alaska’s US Senators and Congressman
Lisa Murkowski – Senator
Anchorage: 907-271-3735
Mat-Su: 907-376-7665
Dan Sullivan – Senator
Anchorage: 907-271-5915
Mat-Su: 357-9956
Vacant – Representative
Anchorage: 907-271-5978
TIPS TO STAY IN THE LOOP
More important than ever!
TIP #1: The Alaska State Legislature web site is the place to track bills, locate and contact your legislators (session), and access committee information. Questions? Try the help wizard or call 1-800-478-4648.
TIP #2: SMS Bill Tracking! Once you know what bill(s) you want to monitor, here’s a convenient way to track what’s happening. Text any bill number (ex: SB1) to 559-245-2529 to enroll in text alerts for that particular piece of legislation. You’ll receive an enrollment confirmation as well as instructions on how to unsubscribe.
TIP #3: How to Get in Touch with Shelley! Give our office a call at (907)465-3743 or 800-565-3743 or send an email to Sen.Shelley.Hughes@akleg.gov. If you need assistance, want a response, or need other follow-up, please call rather than email.
Buddy Whitt – Chief of Staff
-Senator’s Aide for Judiciary Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Judiciary Finance Subcommittee
-Senator’s Aide for Senate Floor
Buddy.Whitt@akleg.gov
907-465-5025
Daniel Phelps – Legislative Aide
-Committee Aide for Community and Regional Affairs
-Senator’s Aide for Education Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Alaska Food & Farm Caucus
-Senator’s Aide for Administration Finance Subcommittee
Daniel.Phelps@akleg.gov
907-465-1172
Brent Bartlett – Legislative Aide
-Senator’s Aide for Health & Social Services Committee
-Senator’s Aide for Transportation Finance Subcommittee
-Senator’s Scheduler
Brent.Bartlett@akleg.gov
907-465-3743
Juneau Office
Alaska State Capitol Rm 30
Juneau, Alaska 99801
907-465-3743
800-565-3743
Mat-Su Office (closed while in Juneau)
600 E. Railroad Avenue
Wasilla, Alaska 99654
907-376-3725