House Passes Barbers Board Reform, Honors NICU Lifesaving Work
The Alaska House of Representatives unanimously passed House Bill 243 on Tuesday, a government efficiency measure that streamlines licensing for barbers, hairdressers, and other aesthetics professionals. The bill passed 39-0 and codifies current practice by formally allowing the Board of Barbers and Hairdressers to delegate licensing responsibilities to the state division. Representative Ashley Carrick, who sponsored the legislation, stated the measure "ensures professionals can get to work quickly and easily" while maintaining board oversight of regulations. The board oversees all aesthetics professions in Alaska, including barbering, hairdressing, hair braiding, manicuring, body piercing, and tattooing. The change aligns Alaska with seven other state boards and has no fiscal impact. Separately, Representative Andrew Gray highlighted achievements in Alaska's healthcare system, citing statistics from the state's only Level 3 NICU. Gray reported that 558 out of 577 babies admitted in 2024 survived, a 97% survival rate. "Less than 100 years ago, the survival rate for babies born at less than 28 weeks was zero percent; today, it is between 70 and 90 percent," Gray noted. The House also received committee reports on several bills, including measures on voter preregistration for minors and virtual currency kiosks, while a resolution recognizing public safety telecommunicators as first responders was held over due to objections.
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