House Faces Russian Seafood Ban, Spending Limits, and Healthcare Access Bills
The Alaska House of Representatives advanced several bills Monday aimed at protecting fishing jobs, tightening state spending rules, and expanding healthcare in rural areas.
The measures reflect ongoing challenges facing lawmakers this session: competition from Russian seafood, debates over how to tap state savings, and persistent gaps in rural medical care.
Russian Seafood Protections
The House received Senate amendments to House Joint Resolution 29, which urges continuation of the national prohibition on Russian seafood imports. The federal ban, imposed in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine and expanded in 2023 to cover third-party processing primarily in China, is set to expire later in 2026. The Senate added language requiring coordination with federal agencies to monitor re-labeled Russian seafood entering U.S. ports. The amendments also call for nationwide sanctions to close loopholes that allow Russian products to reach consumers through third-party countries. The resolution is part of actions by Alaska lawmakers to support the state's ailing seafood industry, which faces unfair competition when Russian seafood enters markets under false labels.
Spending Limit Debate
The Senate granted limited powers to conference committees working on House Bill 289. The bill would require a three-quarter vote for Constitutional Budget Reserve withdrawals exceeding $1 billion annually, with exceptions for emergencies. The measure adds oversight for large withdrawals from Alaska's primary savings account. The Constitutional Budget Reserve serves as a financial cushion during economic downturns.
Healthcare Bills Advance
The Health and Social Services Committee advanced two healthcare measures. House Bill 123 requires insurers to reimburse telehealth at the same rate as in-person visits. Senate Bill 45 expands physician assistant scope of practice, allowing PAs to prescribe controlled substances under supervision and perform certain procedures. Both measures affect healthcare access in rural Alaska, where there are only 1.5 physicians per 1,000 residents.
Senate Bill 64 on election finance received a split committee recommendation, setting up potential floor debate.
Sexual Assault Advocate Recognized
Representative Louise Stutes recognized Katie Boats, a Juneau resident who has advocated for sexual assault law reforms for a decade. Boats is a sexual assault survivor who worked as a school bus driver for 17 years. She has been a regular presence at the Capitol building advocating for victims' rights.
The House welcomed other guests, including University of Alaska Anchorage Alaska Studies Professor Maria Williams.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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