What's going on in Alabama

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Jan 14, 2025

Are you tired of adjusting your clock twice a year? Lawmakers are, once again, making another run at putting us on Daylight Saving Time permanently. It comes up every year, it seems like most people are on board, and then it quietly goes away.

We have that and more in the following report. Thanks for reading,

Ike

 

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Burnin' daylight

If national politics has a version of Alabama's annual lottery head-fake, it has to be Daylight Saving Time.

First of all, as the issue comes up, once again, let's clarify the sides of the issue because people often say they hate Daylight Saving Time when that's not what they mean.

Daylight Saving Time is what we're on during the summertime; you get an extra hour of daylight in the evening. Standard Time is what we're on right now; you're sometimes driving home from work at 5 with your headlights on.

Many people would rather not spring forward and fall back every year, so they would prefer to remain on either Standard Time or Daylight Saving Time.

Of those people, it seems that most of them -- or at least the most vocal of them -- would prefer to remain on Daylight Saving Time, so we have more evening sun during the wintertime.

Both Alabama's U.S. senators, Tommy Tuberville and Katie Britt, are backing a bill by Florida Republican Rick Scott that would put us forever on Daylight Saving Time, reports AL.com's Leada Gore.

This has been introduced several times before and has made it through the Senate before dying in the House of Representatives.

The first question that likely comes up is: Why can't we make this change at the state level, and don't some states already deviate from the spring-forward/fall-back cha-cha?

Per the Uniform Time Act of 1966, Alabama could decide to go permanently on Standard Time but not Daylight Saving Time. That's what Hawaii and Arizona do. But that would just mean earlier evenings in the summertime and not affect winter evenings at all.

Which is the opposite of what the lawmakers want.

Read more about this story here
 

More ER options

Another freestanding emergency room has opened in Alabama, this one in Hartselle, reports AL.com's Savannah Tryens-Fernandes.

This is a trend we've seen in recent years, with now nearly a dozen freestanding ERs in the state. The freestanding ERs are staffed and equipped as you would expect an ER to be, but they're not part of a hospital facility. They do need to be affiliated with a hospital. Cullman Regional Hospital and the City of Hartselle worked to open the Hartselle Health Park ER.

We're all well aware of the diminishing number of hospitals in rural parts of the state. The president of the Alabama Hospital Association has warned us that freestanding ERs aren't a solution to that specific problem.

The freestanding ERs have taken hold in suburbs or places where sprawl or traffic situations make traveling to the hospital inconvenient. AHA President Don Williamson told us for a previous story that, in other places where rural hospitals have closed because they couldn't stay in business, the freestanding ERs face the same difficult economic environment that a hospital would.

Hartselle, meanwhile, finally has an ER facility in the city limits. That will save some people the 20-minute drive to Decatur for emergency services.

Read more about this story here
 

Flags flying

Gov. Kay Ivey has ordered that U.S. flags at the Alabama capitol and on state buildings be flown at full-staff on President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration day, Jan. 20, reports AL.com's Howard Koplowitz.

The move, at least in states under similar orders, apparently relieves Trump of concerns he had expressed over flags at half-staff during his inauguration.

President Biden ordered flags to be at half-staff for a 30-day period of mourning after President Jimmy Carter's death. That's standard procedure.

Trump objected to the order being in place during the change of power, however, taking to social media to claim that Democrats were "giddy" over the lower flags because they don't love America.

Nerdy copy editor side note: People often use the terms interchangeably, but per the AP Stylebook, "half-mast" is used on ships and naval stations ashore but "half-staff" is used elsewhere.

Read more about this story here
 

Lawmaker in court

An Alabama state lawmaker has agreed to be bound by a protective order in exchange for having domestic-violence charged dropped, reports AL.com's Heather Gann.

State House Rep. Tracy Estes, a Winfield Republican, was jailed in September on charges of third-degree domestic violence. His wife claimed she locked herself in a bedroom during an argument and that Estes threatened her in an incident that lasted a couple of hours. She claimed that his behavior had also happened previously.

The court agreement puts a protective order in effect for two years and states that if Estes makes contact with his wife it would amount to a breach of the order. Estes also has to pay court costs and complete a state-certified domestic-violence offender program.

A breach of the agreement would result in the charges being reinstated.

Read more about this story here
 

More Alabama News

  • Man sentenced to prison for operating large dogfighting ring
  • Birmingham postal worker convicted of supplying stolen checks to sell online
  • Huntsville eyes further growth with 400-acre Limestone County annexation vote
  • More Dave & Buster’s locations in Alabama?
  • Huntsville’s newest music festival boasts some big names
 

Born on This Date

In 1936, R&B singer/songwriter Clarence Carter of Montgomery.

 

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