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Bill

SCR 26

NOT INTRODUCED

34th Legislature (2025-2026)

SCR 26 expresses a position or sentiment of the Alaska Legislature but has not been introduced, so its specific purpose or actions are not yet defined.

(S) NOT INTRODUCED
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Bill Summary · SCR 26

Summary of SCR 26 (Alaska, 34th Legislature)

Note: SCR stands for Senate Concurrent Resolution. This entry reflects the bill’s basic status and available attributes as of the provided action history.

Purpose and intent

  • SCR 26 is a concurrent resolution considered by the Alaska Legislature. As of the action history, it has not been introduced (NOT INTRODUCED) and therefore the specific substantive text is not available in the provided record.
  • In general, concurrent resolutions express the sentiment or position of both chambers or recognize, congratulate, memorialize, or urge action, without the force of law. The exact purpose of SCR 26 would be determined by its sponsor and the text once introduced.

Key provisions and changes

  • The record does not include the bill’s text, sponsor, or specific provisions. Without the introduced text, the exact scope (number of sections, fiscal notes, agency actions, or policy changes) cannot be stated.
  • Typical concurrent resolutions may:
    • Recognize individuals, organizations, or events.
    • Urge decisions by executive agencies or the federal government.
    • Declare positions on policy matters or commemorations.
  • No fiscal impact analysis, policy mandates, or regulatory changes are expected to accompany a concurrent resolution per se, but any accompanying statements or findings would be provided in the introduced text.

Affected parties and impacts

  • Depending on the topic, SCR 26 could affect:
    • Members of both chambers (Senate and House) as sponsors or co-sponsors.
    • State agencies or departments if urging action or highlighting issues.
    • Alaska residents or specific communities if the resolution recognizes or addresses a particular issue.
  • Until the text is introduced, the specific affected groups or stakeholders cannot be determined.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Status: NOT INTRODUCED as of 2026-05-13.
  • Typical timeline after introduction:
    • Introduction in the Senate (or concurrent path) followed by referral to committee(s).
    • Committee review, potential amendments, and floor consideration in both chambers.
    • Passage in both chambers and certification to the governor (if applicable) for signing or veto.
  • Since SCRs do not usually create operative law, they typically do not require a signature or become law, though they may request or urge actions by other branches or agencies.

Notes

  • For a complete and precise summary, the introduced text and sponsor information would need to be provided. Once SCR 26 is introduced, reviewing the bill’s language will clarify its purpose, specific resolutions, and any recommended actions.

If you can share the introduced version or provide the sponsor and text, I can produce a detailed section-by-section summary with exact provisions, fiscal notes (if any), and anticipated effects.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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