{"id":43645,"date":"2019-02-21T08:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-02-21T17:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/69-bills-filed-in-the-house-hannan-files-first-bill\/"},"modified":"2019-02-22T09:00:13","modified_gmt":"2019-02-22T18:00:13","slug":"69-bills-filed-in-the-house-hannan-files-first-bill","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/69-bills-filed-in-the-house-hannan-files-first-bill\/","title":{"rendered":"69 bills filed in the House, Hannan files first bill"},"content":{"rendered":"
Now that the Alaska House of Representatives is organized, its members are urgently bustling about the Capitol.<\/p>\n
There are now 69 bills filed in the House but only 83 days left in the session. Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s unprecedented budget proposal to cut $1.6 billion from the operating budget, along with the budget’s associated bills, will likely gobble up most that time.<\/p>\n
Here is a quick sampling of some of the bills that have been filed since the House was organized:<\/p>\n
• House Bill 43 would exempt the state of Alaska from participating in daylight savings time<\/a>. It was introduced by Rep. George Rauscher, R-Sutton.<\/p>\n “I think there are a number of problems that we run into because of daylight saving time,” Rauscher said. “The shifting back and forth, resetting clocks. … It’s needless.”<\/p>\n • HB 58, also introduced by Rauscher, would create a new rule for electing a Speaker of the House. Under the bill’s proposal, if the House were to go 14 days without a speaker, the members of the political party with the majority would get to elect the speaker. This year the House went 31 days before electing Rep. Bryce Edgmon<\/a>, I-Dillingham, as speaker.<\/p>\n