OPINION
MATTHEWS, Justice.
The issues in this case are whether the Alaska Constitution is violated by a statute which (1) requires the creation of areas in which permits for subsistence hunting and fishing may not be granted, and (2) grants priority hunting and fishing rights to a preferred class of subsistence users based on where they reside.
I.
BACKGROUND
Since 1978, subsistence hunting and fishing has had statutory priority over sport and commercial hunting and fishing.
In practice, when a fish or game population is insufficient to supply all consumptive uses consistent with the sustained yield principle, non-subsistence uses must be restricted; when a population is sufficient only to supply subsistence uses, nonsubsistence uses must be eliminated.
From the outset, the statute establishing the subsistence priority created two tiers of subsistence users.
The first tier includes all subsistence users.
The second tier is more restricted. Tier II status becomes important when a fish or game population is inadequate to satisfy all subsistence needs. In such eases Tier I users’ harvest opportunities must be curtailed or eliminated so that Tier II users can harvest the population.
Under the current statutory formulation the Boards of Fisheries and Game define Tier II subsistence users based on:
(i) the customary and direct dependence on the fish stock or game population by the subsistence user for human consumption as a mainstay of livelihood;
(ii) the proximity of the domicile of the subsistence user to the stock or population; and
(in) the ability of the subsistence user to obtain food if subsistence is restricted or eliminated.
AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B).
In 1986 the subsistence statute was amended to define subsistence hunting and fishing as activities which can be undertaken “only by a resident domiciled in a rural area of the state.”
The term “subsistence uses” was also defined as requiring residency in a rural area.
A rural area, in turn, was defined as “a community or area of the state in which the noncommercial, customary, and traditional use of fish or game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic of the economy of the community or area.”
Subsistence activities were limited to rural areas.
In
McDowell v. State, 785
P.2d 1 (Alaska 1989), we held that the 1986 statute was unconstitutional insofar as it disqualified as subsistence users residents of areas classified as nonrural. Following
McDowell,
all Alaskans became eligible to participate in subsistence hunting and fishing.
State v. Morry,
836 P.2d 358, 368 (Alaska 1992).
In 1992 the legislature revised the subsistence statute.
As revised, the statute continues to grant subsistence a priority over other consumptive uses and continues to provide for two tiers of subsistence users.
However, the new statute also requires the Boards to identify nonsubsistenee areas— areas where no subsistence priority exists.
The definition of a nonsubsistence area under the 1992 revision, “an area or community where dependence upon subsistence is not a principal characteristic of the economy, culture, and way of life of the area or community,” is essentially the negative of the definition of “rural area” which is still defined as “a community or area of the state in which the noncommercial, customary, and traditional use of fish or game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic of the economy of the community or area.”
The nonsubsistence provisions of the 1992 revisions to AS 16.05.258 expire on October I, 1995, and the 1986 version again becomes law.
Pursuant to the 1992 revisions, the Boards established the “Anchorage/MatSu/Kenai nonsubsistence area” encompassing most of the Kenai Peninsula, all of the Municipality of Anchorage, and much of the Matanuska Susitna Borough. In addition, the Boards established nonsubsistence areas in regions surrounding Fairbanks, Ketchikan, Juneau, and Valdez. 5 AAC 99.015.
II.
PROCEEDINGS BELOW
The Kenaitze Indian Tribe filed suit in 1991, seeking a judicial declaration (1) that it was entitled to operate a communal set net in the Kenai River and (2) that the State was not managing the salmon stocks in Upper Cook Inlet in accordance with the subsistence priority as required by law. When the Boards established the Anchorage/Mat-Su/Kenai nonsubsistence area, Kenaitze amended its complaint to state claims that the nonsubsistence area violated its members’ state constitutional rights under the equal access clauses of article VIII, sections 3,15, and 17, and the equal rights and opportunities clause of article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution. Further, Kenaitze claimed that the Boards’ creation of the An
chorage/MatSu/Kenai nonsubsistence area was not in compliance with the 1992 statute because the Boards had exceeded their authority and acted arbitrarily. The Ninilchik Traditional Council, the Native Village of Eklutna, and the Knik Tribal Council intervened and filed similar claims.
The State and Kenaitze filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment on their constitutional claims. The superior court granted the motion of Kenaitze and denied that of the State. The court entered a final judgment declaring the nonsubsistence area provision of the 1992 act unconstitutional in violation of article VIII, sections 3,15, and 17 of the Alaska Constitution and therefore void, and severed AS 16.05.258(c) from the remainder of the 1992 act. The other claims of Kenaitze were declared moot. The State now appeals.
Briefly stated, the rationale of the superior court was as follows. Residents of nonsub-sistence areas and residents of subsistence areas are similarly situated classes. The former are treated differently than the latter because “only residents outside of nonsubsis-tence areas ...
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OPINION
MATTHEWS, Justice.
The issues in this case are whether the Alaska Constitution is violated by a statute which (1) requires the creation of areas in which permits for subsistence hunting and fishing may not be granted, and (2) grants priority hunting and fishing rights to a preferred class of subsistence users based on where they reside.
I.
BACKGROUND
Since 1978, subsistence hunting and fishing has had statutory priority over sport and commercial hunting and fishing.
In practice, when a fish or game population is insufficient to supply all consumptive uses consistent with the sustained yield principle, non-subsistence uses must be restricted; when a population is sufficient only to supply subsistence uses, nonsubsistence uses must be eliminated.
From the outset, the statute establishing the subsistence priority created two tiers of subsistence users.
The first tier includes all subsistence users.
The second tier is more restricted. Tier II status becomes important when a fish or game population is inadequate to satisfy all subsistence needs. In such eases Tier I users’ harvest opportunities must be curtailed or eliminated so that Tier II users can harvest the population.
Under the current statutory formulation the Boards of Fisheries and Game define Tier II subsistence users based on:
(i) the customary and direct dependence on the fish stock or game population by the subsistence user for human consumption as a mainstay of livelihood;
(ii) the proximity of the domicile of the subsistence user to the stock or population; and
(in) the ability of the subsistence user to obtain food if subsistence is restricted or eliminated.
AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B).
In 1986 the subsistence statute was amended to define subsistence hunting and fishing as activities which can be undertaken “only by a resident domiciled in a rural area of the state.”
The term “subsistence uses” was also defined as requiring residency in a rural area.
A rural area, in turn, was defined as “a community or area of the state in which the noncommercial, customary, and traditional use of fish or game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic of the economy of the community or area.”
Subsistence activities were limited to rural areas.
In
McDowell v. State, 785
P.2d 1 (Alaska 1989), we held that the 1986 statute was unconstitutional insofar as it disqualified as subsistence users residents of areas classified as nonrural. Following
McDowell,
all Alaskans became eligible to participate in subsistence hunting and fishing.
State v. Morry,
836 P.2d 358, 368 (Alaska 1992).
In 1992 the legislature revised the subsistence statute.
As revised, the statute continues to grant subsistence a priority over other consumptive uses and continues to provide for two tiers of subsistence users.
However, the new statute also requires the Boards to identify nonsubsistenee areas— areas where no subsistence priority exists.
The definition of a nonsubsistence area under the 1992 revision, “an area or community where dependence upon subsistence is not a principal characteristic of the economy, culture, and way of life of the area or community,” is essentially the negative of the definition of “rural area” which is still defined as “a community or area of the state in which the noncommercial, customary, and traditional use of fish or game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic of the economy of the community or area.”
The nonsubsistence provisions of the 1992 revisions to AS 16.05.258 expire on October I, 1995, and the 1986 version again becomes law.
Pursuant to the 1992 revisions, the Boards established the “Anchorage/MatSu/Kenai nonsubsistence area” encompassing most of the Kenai Peninsula, all of the Municipality of Anchorage, and much of the Matanuska Susitna Borough. In addition, the Boards established nonsubsistence areas in regions surrounding Fairbanks, Ketchikan, Juneau, and Valdez. 5 AAC 99.015.
II.
PROCEEDINGS BELOW
The Kenaitze Indian Tribe filed suit in 1991, seeking a judicial declaration (1) that it was entitled to operate a communal set net in the Kenai River and (2) that the State was not managing the salmon stocks in Upper Cook Inlet in accordance with the subsistence priority as required by law. When the Boards established the Anchorage/Mat-Su/Kenai nonsubsistence area, Kenaitze amended its complaint to state claims that the nonsubsistence area violated its members’ state constitutional rights under the equal access clauses of article VIII, sections 3,15, and 17, and the equal rights and opportunities clause of article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution. Further, Kenaitze claimed that the Boards’ creation of the An
chorage/MatSu/Kenai nonsubsistence area was not in compliance with the 1992 statute because the Boards had exceeded their authority and acted arbitrarily. The Ninilchik Traditional Council, the Native Village of Eklutna, and the Knik Tribal Council intervened and filed similar claims.
The State and Kenaitze filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment on their constitutional claims. The superior court granted the motion of Kenaitze and denied that of the State. The court entered a final judgment declaring the nonsubsistence area provision of the 1992 act unconstitutional in violation of article VIII, sections 3,15, and 17 of the Alaska Constitution and therefore void, and severed AS 16.05.258(c) from the remainder of the 1992 act. The other claims of Kenaitze were declared moot. The State now appeals.
Briefly stated, the rationale of the superior court was as follows. Residents of nonsub-sistence areas and residents of subsistence areas are similarly situated classes. The former are treated differently than the latter because “only residents outside of nonsubsis-tence areas ... are afforded convenient local subsistence access to fish and game resources.” Moreover, when fish and game populations are insufficient to satisfy all subsistence needs and the Tier II preference is invoked, “residents of nonsubsistence areas will inevitably suffer compared to other subsistence users,” because the section which determines who may become a Tier II hunter or fisherman “requires consideration of ‘the proximity of the domicile of the subsistence user to the stock or population.’ AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B)(ii).” This differential treatment may be justified by the need to allocate fish and wildlife resources “given the key social and economic roles that subsistence, sport, and commercial fishing and hunting play in the state, as well as the mandate of article VIII, section 4 of the Alaska Constitution that replenishable resource utilization be ‘subject to preferences among beneficial uses.’ ” However, based on language in
Gilbert v. State,
803 P.2d 391, 399 (Alaska 1990), an allocation must restrict competing uses to the least possible extent consistent with the purpose of the allocation. Alaska Statute 16.05.258(c) fails to meet this requirement as it bars subsistence in a particular area without requiring consideration of resource availability: “To create areas where subsistence activities are flatly prohibited, without consideration of whether the resources in the area could support some kind of balance between subsistence, sport and commercial hunting and fishing, does not further the state’s expressed purpose to ‘allocate’ resources among user groups.” The superior court concluded as follows:
Stepping back to view the statute in light of its history, it becomes apparent that the criteria in AS 16.05.258(c) for determining nonsubsistence areas effectively re-establish the rural/urban residency requirement struck down in
McDowell.
The statutory language defining “rural areas” in the 1986 statute is repeated in the definition of “nonsubsistence areas” under the 1992 statute.
Compare
AS 16.05.940(25) (1986)
with
AS 16.05.258(c) (1992). The only significant change has been to do away with the requirement that only rural residents may become members of the subsistence user class, although subsistence use is still allowed only in rural areas. The statute, by selectively prohibiting local subsistence activities and conferring “tier two” advantages based on the proximity of one’s domicile to available subsistence resources, is plainly discriminatory against residents of nonsubsistence areas. Such a substantially residency-based classification scheme, under
McDowell,
violates the equal access clauses of the Alaska Constitution.
Because of the importance of the role that the Tier II domicile factor assumed in the rationale of the superior court, we ordered that the parties brief the constitutionality of this factor along with the other issues in the case.
III.
DISCUSSION
A.
Relevant Constitutional and Statutory Provisions
The equal access clauses of the Alaska Constitution are article VIII, sections 3, 15, and 17; the sustained yield clause is contained in article VIII, section 4.
Alaska Statute 16.05.258 is the current subsistence statute.
,
Section 1 of chapter 1, SSSLA
1992 contains the legislative findings, purpose and intent with respect to the 1992 subsistence revisions.
B.
Is the “Proximity of the Domicile” Factor Unconstitutional?
We turn first to the question of whether linking eligibility for Tier II subsistence status to “proximity of the domicile of the subsistence user” to the target fish or game population violates article VIII, sections 3,15, and 17 of the Alaska Constitution. This question is governed by our decision in
McDowell v. State,
785 P.2d 1 (Alaska 1989).
At issue in
McDowell
was whether provisions in the 1986 subsistence statute which barred all nonrural Alaska residents from eligibility as first or second tier subsistence users violated the article VIII equal access clauses.
Id.
at 1. We held that the rural preference was a special privilege explicitly barred by the first sentence of section 15 and implicitly barred by the common use and equal application clauses, sections 3 and 17.
Id.
at 6, 9. We concluded “that the requirement contained in the 1986 subsistence statute, that one must reside in a rural area in order to participate in subsistence hunting and fishing, violates sections 3, 15, and 17 of article VIII of the Alaska Constitution.”
Id.
at 9.
Concerning sections 3,15, and 17 of article VIII, we observed that while they have varied ramifications they share one meaning: “exclusive or special privileges to take fish and wildlife are prohibited.”
Id.
at 6. We noted that these clauses afford protection against the creation of a “closed class” of fish and game users.
Id.
at 6-7. We observed that although the state was empowered to make decisions concerning which among such diverse groups as commercial, sport and subsistence users would have a preferred right to harvest a certain species, that authority “does not imply a power to limit admission to a user group.”
Id.
at 8. We explained that the constitution does not bar “all methods of exclusion where exclusion is required for species protection reasons.”
Id.
at 9. While we had no occasion to state what exclusionary criteria might be permissible in such circumstances, the opinion makes it clear that residence-based criteria are not permissible. We both quoted and stressed language holding that people who reside near a fish or game population do not have a higher claim to that population than state residents whose domiciles are more distant:
Where the necessity for the preservation of the wild game and fish exists in certain territories of the state, that territory may be segregated for the purpose of regulating the right to taking game and fish therein;
but the “privilege of taking and using same must be extended to the people of the state outside of the territory upon the same terms that are given to those who are residents of the territory embraced in the legislation.
Id.
at 12 (quoting
Lewis v. State,
110 Ark. 204, 161 S.W. 154, 155-56 (1913)) (emphasis added by this court in
McDowell).
Our holding in
McDowell
is controlling here. The requirements of the equal access clauses apply to both tiers of subsistence users. Just as eligibility to participate in all subsistence hunting and fishing cannot be made dependent on whether one lives in an urban or rural area, eligibility to participate in Tier II subsistence hunting and fishing cannot be based on how close one fives to a given fish or game population.
We conclude that AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B)(ii), which uses the proximity of the domicile of the Tier II subsistence permit applicant to the fish or game population which the applicant wishes to harvest as a basis for the applicant’s eligibility, violates sections 3, 15, and 17 of article VIII of the Alaska Constitution.
The question which flows from this conclusion is whether the entire subsistence statute should be declared unconstitutional or whether AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B)(ii) may be severed from the rest of the statute.
A general severability clause is contained in AS 01.10.030:
Any law heretofore or hereafter enacted by the Alaska legislature which lacks a severability clause shall be construed as though it contained the clause in the following language: “If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of this Act and the application to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.”
In
Lynden Transport, Inc. v. State,
532 P.2d 700, 712-13 (Alaska 1975), we indicated that this clause reverses the common law presumption against severability and creates a slight presumption in favor of severability:
A provision will not be deemed severable “unless it appears both that, standing alone, legal effect can be given to it and that the legislature intended the provision to stand, in case others included in the act and held bad should fall.”
Id.
at 713 (quoting
Dorchy v. Kansas,
264 U.S. 286, 290, 44 S.Ct. 323, 324, 68 L.Ed. 686 (1924)). “The key question is whether the portion remaining, once the offending portion of the statute is severed, is independent and complete in itself so that it may be presumed that the legislature would have enacted the valid parts without the invalid part.”
Sonne-man v. Hickel,
836 P.2d 936, 941 (Alaska 1992).
Deleting subpart (ii) from AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B) results in a subsection which requires the creation of a Tier II class of subsistence users based on dependence on the target fish or game population and the ability of the individual subsistence user to obtain food if subsistence use of the particular population were restricted or eliminated. The subsection as thus redacted is logically complete and capable of being given legal meaning.
Whether the legislature would have intended the subsection as redacted to stand had it known that the proximity of the domicile clause would be held unconstitutional is a question which cannot be answered with complete confidence. However, given the importance of subsistence as reflected in the legislative findings prefacing the 1992 act,
periods in which individuals needfully dependent on subsistence are deprived of an opportunity to harvest fish or game are to be avoided. A holding that subsection (B)(ii) is not severable could result in such a period'. Given this, and the statutory presumption in favor of severability, we conclude that (B)(ii) is severable.
C.
Is AS 16.05.258(c) Unconstitutional?
Alaska Statute 16.05.258(c) requires the Boards to “identify by regulation” non-subsistence areas.
In these areas, the subsistence priority over sport and commercial uses does not apply, and the statute states that “[t]he boards may not permit subsistence hunting or fishing.” However, personal use fishing
and sport hunting are allowed. As the methods of conducting these pursuits are simdlar to their subsistence counterparts, the critical difference in non-subsistence areas is the absence of the subsistence priority. When this is appreciated, the superior court’s conclusion that section 258(c) authorizes the creation of “areas where subsistence activities are flatly prohibited, without consideration of whether the resources in the area could support some kind of balance between subsistence, sport,
and commercial” uses may be critically examined. Subsistence activities — fishing with nets or other devices or hunting with firearms for food for personal and family consumption — are in no sense flatly prohibited in nonsubsistence areas. Though subsistence permits may not be issued, subsistence activities can still take place. What is eliminated in nonsubsistence areas is the statutory subsistence priority. Without the subsistence priority, a balance may be struck in allocating fish and game resources between commercial, sport, and subsistence types of activities. The interests of all competing users can be considered.
With the statutory subsistence priority intact no balance is possible as long as a fish or game population is not sufficient to provide for all subsistence uses.
A nonsubsistence area “is an area or community where dependence upon subsistence is not a principal characteristic of the economy, culture, and way of life of the area or community.”
Under the 1986 subsistence statute, only fish and game populations in rural areas could be exploited for subsistence purposes.
A “rural area” was defined as a “community or area of the state in which the noncommercial, customary, and traditional use of fish or game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic of the economy of the community or area.”
Thus, the areas defined as “nonrural” under the 1986 statute are now defined as “nonsub-sistence areas” under the 1992 statute. What the 1992 statute adds is the requirement that the Boards jointly consider the relative importance of subsistence in a given area based on twelve enumerated socio-eco-nomic factors.
Even this did not signal a change in practice, however, as the twelve factors parallel twelve factors expressed in a regulation used by the Boards to determine whether an area was “rural.”
The superior court held that AS 16.05.258(e) is unconstitutional for reasons which we have summarized above.
See supra
at 685. Much of the court’s rationale was based on the proximity of the domicile requirement of AS 16.05.258(b)(4)(B)(ii) which effectively barred residents of nonsub-sistence areas from participating in Tier II hunts. With the proximity of the domicile requirement stricken, the remaining detriment to residents of nonsubsistence areas identified by the superior court is a claim of differential treatment based on inconvenience: “[Ojnly residents outside of nonsub-sistence areas ... are afforded convenient local subsistence access to fish and game resources.”
Inconvenience is in no sense the equivalent of a bar to eligibility for participation in subsistence hunting and fishing and does not suffice to trigger an analysis under the equal access clauses. What we recently stated in
Tongass Sport Fishing Ass’n v. State,
866 P.2d 1314,1318 (Alaska 1994), is also applicable to the current case:
We have held that the “common use” clause of article VIII, section 3, the “no exclusive right of fishery” clause of section 15, and the “uniform application” clause of section 17 are not implicated unless limits are placed on the admission to resource user groups.
McDowell v. State,
785 P.2d 1, 8 & n. 14 (Alaska 1989);
see also Owsi-chek v. State, Guide Licensing & Control Board,
763 P.2d 488, 492 (Alaska 1988). Article VIII limitations on the state’s power to restrict access to natural resource user groups do not apply to the state’s authority to allocate fishery resources among sport, commercial, and subsistence users. In
Kenai Peninsula [Fishermen’s Cooperative Ass’n v. State,
628 P.2d 897 (Alaska 1981) ] we said:
While section 15 does prohibit granting monopoly fishing rights, that section was not meant to prohibit differential treatment of such diverse user groups as commercial, sports, and subsistence fishermen. To conclude that, because a certain species is made available for sport fishing in a given area, commercial fishing of the same species in the same area must also be allowed, would be to go far beyond the purpose of the section.
628 P.2d at 904.
The fact that residents of nonsubsistence areas must travel in order to utilize subsistence permits is not a limitation to their admission to a subsistence user group.
Further, just as the fact that a certain species is made available for sport fishing in a given area does not mean that the same species must be made available for commercial fishing in the same area, the fact that a certain species is made available for sport or commercial use in a given area does not mean that the constitution commands that the same species be made available in the same area for priority subsistence use.
The legislature has mandated that the Boards, in determining which areas are to be nonsubsistence areas, make decisions allocating fish and game resources among competing users. Such decisions are constitutionally required under article VIII, section 4 of the Alaska Constitution.
“The state may, indeed must, make allocation decisions between sport, commercial, and subsistence users.”
McDowell v. State,
785 P.2d 1, 8 (Alaska 1989). Allocation decisions entail a complex mixture of biological, historical, and socio-economic factors.
These factors are “often competing.” Tongass
Sport Fishing Ass’n,
866 P.2d at 1319.
In reviewing allocation decisions made by the Board, a deferential standard of review is employed. Board decisions are upheld so long as they are not unreasonable or arbitrary and proper procedures have been followed.
Id.
(Board’s decision favorable to commercial trailers concerning allocation of king salmon in Southeast Alaska not “unreasonable or arbitrary”);
Gilbert v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game,
803 P.2d 391, 399 (Alaska 1990) (Board’s decision allocating sockeye salmon between commercial fishing interests in two areas on the Alaska Peninsula not arbitrary or unreasonable);
Meier v. State, Bd. of Fisheries,
739 P.2d 172,174-175 (Alaska 1987) (Board’s decision allocating sockeye salmon between commercial setnetters and driftnetters in Bristol Bay “reasonable and not arbitrary.”). We have not subjected allocation decisions to the more rigorous least restrictive alternative test employed in cases where entry into a user class is restricted.
Compare McDowell,
785 P.2d at 10;
Owsi-chek,
763 P.2d at 498 n. 17; and
Johns v. Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n,
758 P.2d 1256, 1266 (Alaska 1988),
with Tongass,
866 P.2d at 1319;
Gilbert,
803 P.2d at 399; and
Meier,
739 P.2d at 175.
Allocation
decisions are so complex and multi-faceted that they are not amenable to analysis under such a test.
In this case, the court did not reach the question of whether the joint Boards acted unreasonably or arbitrarily in creating the Anchorage/MatSu/Kenai nonsubsistence area. Instead, the court ruled that the statute was invalid on its face using a least restrictive alternative test. Given the proximity of the domicile Tier II requirement, use of this test was not error, for that requirement erected a bar to admission to a user class. However, with this requirement stricken from the statute, this test no longer applies.
Alaska Statute 16.05.258(c), as it stands without the domicile proximity requirement, contains no characteristics implicating the equal access clauses of article VIII. It bars no Alaskan from participating in any fish or game user class. As these clauses formed the basis for the superior court’s decision and no alternative grounds for upholding the court’s decision have been argued, the decision must be reversed.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The Tier II proximity of the domicile factor violates sections 3, 15, and 17 of article VIII of the Alaska Constitution, because it bars Alaska residents from participating in certain subsistence activities based on where they live. The statutory section mandating the creation of nonsubsistence areas does not violate these sections. The judgment of the superior court is REVERSED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.