Sponsor Statement for SB 101

"The Alaska Regulation Reform Act"

Senate Bill 101 reforms how administrative regulations are adopted by the state of Alaska and places reasonable new limits on the power of state bureaucracy to impose new regulations on Alaskans.

SB 101 increases opportunities for public notice and comment regarding adoption of regulations. SB 101 requires that new regulations pass a "needs" test and be drafted in a way to minimize their impact on personal liberties and property rights. The bill also requires a legislative decenial review of state regulations.

Regulations adopted by state agencies have the effect of law similar to statutes adopted by the legislature. The regulations adoption process however has very few of the safeguards and opportunity for public input that the legislative process has. Unlike statutes which require a series of public hearings in the state House and Senate, regulations can be adopted with a single notice and hearing which may or may not even reflect the actual content of the final version of the regulation.

Once adopted, state regulations can only be amended by the agency that adopted them or by the adoption of a statute that somehow directly conflicts with the regulation. This makes state regulations in Alaska very hard to amend or appeal once in place. Entrenched state bureaucrats, with little incentive to be responsive to the public, often have more real control over public policy through regulations than elected state officials.

Senate Bill 101 makes state regulators more accountable to the public and to elected officials. SB 101 places reasonable and needed restraints on the ever increasing number of state regulations Alaskans live with.

DD/jja