
Matt Groening
107:53 - 108:17
"The only one, as you pointed out, that might be somewhat subjective is determine whether the board has operated in a transparent manner and/or provided adequate public notice. I think that would be more for the legislative auditor to speak to how she would determine that. But as the representative said, we worked with the legislative auditor on crafting this request so that they were quantifiables that they could come back with results on."
“The only one, as you pointed out, that might be somewhat subjective is determine whether the board has operated in a transparent manner and/or provided adequate public notice. I think that would be more for the legislative auditor to speak to how she would determine that. But as the representative said, we worked with the legislative auditor on crafting this request so that they were quantifiables that they could come back with results on.”
The only one, as you pointed out, that might be somewhat subjective is determine whether the board has operated in a transparent manner and/or provided adequate public notice. I think that would be more for the legislative auditor to speak to how she would determine that. But as the representative said, we worked with the legislative auditor on crafting this request so that they were quantifiables that they could come back with results on. Thanks. Would you like to hear from the auditor?
The Alaska Legislative Budget and Audit Committee voted unanimously Thursday to commission a special audit of the Board of Fisheries, examining whether the board followed its own statutes, regulations, and public-notice requirements from October 2023 through July 2026.

Chris Curtis submitted her resignation as Alaska's legislative auditor effective August 30, ending more than 34 years with the division. A three-person subcommittee will review applicants and recommend a nominee to the full committee in August, followed by separate House and Senate confirmation votes.
