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Panel debates 50% veterans discount for state commercial shellfish license; DMR flags fiscal and precedent concerns
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Summary
Representative Will Toole proposed LD 20 31 to offer honorably discharged veterans a 50% discount on the state commercial shellfish license. DMR opposed, citing unknown fiscal impacts, shellfish fund reliance, and precedent for other commercial licenses; the committee requested additional fiscal details and implementation options.
The committee heard public testimony on LD 20 31, a bill offered by Representative Will Toole to provide military veterans an across‑the‑board 50% discount on the state commercial shellfish license. Toole framed the bill as a small, practical way to thank veterans and to help them reenter the civilian workforce; he said past state action to reduce fees for young people had successfully encouraged entry into fisheries.
Deirdre Gilbert, on behalf of the Department of Marine Resources, said the department appreciates veterans’ service but opposed the bill as drafted because it would create a commercial license discount for all honorably discharged veterans and the department lacks the data to estimate the fiscal impact. Gilbert explained the bill as written appears to halve the license fee but not the shellfish surcharge, which would reduce the state license from $133 to about $104 unless the surcharge is also cut. DMR raised concerns that the Shellfish Management Fund supports program staff and water‑quality monitoring and that licensing revenue is falling; at the committee’s request, Cole Kamlent provided a 2025 snapshot: balance forward $337,000; licensing fees $276,004.75; total revenues roughly $289,600; personnel expenditures $538,232; total expenditures approximately $561,583; net fund a bit over $220,000 at year end.
Committee members discussed options to limit the fiscal exposure (e.g., halving only the license fee, not the surcharge), whether to target the benefit to disabled veterans or create an application‑based reimbursement program, and the administrative mechanics of verifying veteran status (DD Form 214 or ID cards). DMR said it can accept documentation but does not have reliable counts of how many commercial shellfish license holders are veterans.
No formal work‑session vote on LD 20 31 was recorded at the hearing; the committee closed the hearing and asked DMR to return at work session with fiscal impacts, implementation options, and possible alternatives (targeted discounts, reimbursements, or noncommercial license options).
Next steps: DMR will provide the committee with a fiscal analysis and implementation options for work session consideration.

