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Committee adopts amendments and moves SR-22 insurance bill from committee
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Summary
The House State Affairs Committee adopted two amendments to House Bill 214 (SR-22 insurance), including notification and tiered applicability provisions, and moved the bill from committee with recommendations and fiscal notes attached.
The Alaska House State Affairs Committee on March 31 adopted two amendments to House Bill 214, a bill altering SR-22 insurance requirements, and voted to move the measure from committee.
Chair Carrick opened the session and offered Amendment 1, which extends the law's applicability to accidents occurring before, on or after the act's effective date and requires insurers offering the affected coverage to notify customers of changes to SR-22 requirements within six months. "This just adds additional applicability and transition measures," the chair said as he described the amendment. With no objections, the committee adopted Amendment 1.
Representative Saint Clair then moved Amendment 3, a sponsor-collaborated, tiered approach to SR-22 consequences that, according to Saint Clair, aims to escalate requirements for repeated incidents. "After 4 DUIs, you lose your license for good. After 4 incidents like this, you are carrying an SR-22 indefinitely," Saint Clair said, explaining the amendment's intent to hold repeat offenders accountable.
Sponsor Representative Elise Galvin said she supported the amendment and noted the committee had worked to strike a balance between consequences and fairness. Chair Carrick and members discussed retroactivity and how the amendment interacts with the bill's existing retroactive language; members agreed to review potential adjustments later in the process.
Vice Chair Story moved that "the House State Affairs Committee move House Bill 214 as amended from committee with individual recommendations, attached fiscal notes, and authorizing legal services to make any necessary technical and conforming changes." With no objection, the motion carried and HB214 was moved from committee.
The committee took a brief recess to complete paperwork and proceeded to the next agenda items.
The committee provided no roll-call vote tally on the record; the motion carried by unanimous consent when no member objected. The bill will proceed with committee recommendations and attached fiscal notes.
