What's going on in Alabama
With the Legislative session winding down, we have a short roundup of items that received final approval from the Legislature and now await Gov. Ivey's pen. We'll also see what dish won the Alabama Seafood Cook-Off and decide whether it might stack up to my favorite seafood dish, which I call "Whatever I Catch Fried With Hush Puppies Cheese Grits and Cole Slaw." Thanks for being here. Ike Morgan |
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More Medicaid, prison, mental-health spending |
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No more than two meeting days are left in the Alabama Legislative session. We're going to hit a few highlights coming out of yesterday's action. First, the big one. AL.com's Mike Cason reports that the state Senate gave final approval to the General Fund budget. That's the budget for the non-education agencies for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. It already came through the House of Representatives and now is with Gov. Kay Ivey for her approval. The total is $3.4 billion, a $360 million increase. Lawmakers added $92 million to the Alabama Medicaid Agency, taking it to $955 million. House Ways and Means General Fund Committee Chairman Rex Reynolds said that increase fills a void left by federal pandemic money that's gone away. The Department of Corrections is looking at a $75 million increase, and the Department of Mental Health is getting a $23 million increase. Those are both nearly 10-percent increases. The Education Fund budget is still cooking in a conference committee that's trying to iron out some differences between the House and Senate. |
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The Atlanta Falcons of the NFL are giving grants to some high schools in Alabama to help them begin girls flag-football programs. The amount of the grants wasn't specified by the NFL, but if affects 20 Alabama high schools: Austin, Brewbaker Tech, Carver, Clark-Shaw, Decatur, Elberta, Ellwood Christian, Enterprise, Foley, Hazel Green, Marbury, Monroe County, Montevallo, Mountain Brook, Pell City, Percy Julian, Robertsdale, Spanish Fort, Tallassee and Wilcox Central. Alabama currently has 113 high schools participating in the newly AHSAA-sanctioned sport. |
A chef from about as far as you can get from saltwater in Alabama won the Alabama Seafood Cook-Off, reports AL.com's Lawrence Specker. Kyle Ogden of the Florence restaurant Odette won the annual statewide competition this week at The Wharf in Orange Beach by preparing a pompano filet with a crab and shrimp mousse. He calls the dish "Spring Tide" and it won him $2,500. He'll now represent the state this summer at the Great American Seafood Cook-Off in New Orleans. |
“At a local level, our hands are tied as far as being able or legally allowed to regulate guns. The state of Alabama has chosen to go in the direction of no one even needs a permit. People can ride around with any type of guns.” |
In 1783, Thomas Bibb, our state's second governor. He rose from Senate President to the governor's office when our first governor, Bibb's brother William Wyatt Bibb, fell off a horse and died. In 1940, singer-songwriter Toni Tennille, once part of the husband-and-wife duo Captain & Tennille. She's originally from Montgomery. |
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Jonathan Sobolewski explains the new federal noncompete rules. You can find “Down in Alabama” wherever you get your podcasts, including these places: |
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