
Joyce Anderson
138:55 - 139:20
"Kevin, what I'm going to do is I'm going to look through it and see if there's anything you need to send out in a newsletter, you know, with any update."
“Kevin, what I'm going to do is I'm going to look through it and see if there's anything you need to send out in a newsletter, you know, with any update.”
And be working on something with the rules of procedure and so forth. I think most of it has to do with the complaint section. Kevin, what I'm going to do is I'm going to look through it and see if there's anything you need to send out in a newsletter, you know, with any update. But I don't think there's anything at all, but I will double-check it just to make sure. Um, I would, through the chair, I would suggest the, the agenda.
Alaska's overhauled Legislative Ethics Act took effect June 24 after Gov. Dunleavy declined to sign it, adding a hard statutory requirement that legislators document the legislative purpose behind any travel gifts they accept.

The Select Committee on Legislative Ethics disclosed Friday that a legislator and a legislative employee submitted only a travel itinerary for an Arctic Winter Games trip and declined to provide any further narrative of legislative purpose, exposing a gap that new state law now closes by making agenda submission a hard statutory requirement.

The Select Committee on Legislative Ethics voted unanimously Friday to direct staff to send a letter to the HR manager and Legislative Counsel seeking relief from conducting sexual harassment and civility training, arguing the assignment falls outside its statutory authority and crowds out substantive ethics instruction.
