News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Alabama Senate passes bill overhauling Birmingham Water Works Board
by Alander Rocha, Alabama Reflector
April 25, 2025
A bill significantly restructuring the governance of large municipal water systems sailed through the Alabama Senate Thursday.
SB 330, sponsored by Sen. Dan Roberts, R-Mountain Brook, is broadly worded but effectively targets the Birmingham Water Works Board (BWWB). The legislation overcame potential resistance after last-minute changes that expanded the proposed regional board.
“I think we have the makings of a great water system here with what we’re doing … we’re after a board whose goal is to work together, to provide true, true loyalty to the customer base, not to anyone else,” Roberts said after the bill’s passage.
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The bill applies to municipal water works boards that serve customers across four or more counties beyond the one where the authorizing city is located. It mandates converting such entities into regional boards; establishing new rules for board member appointments, qualifications and terms; implementing stricter ethics and financial reporting requirements and outlining specific board duties.
Roberts said the changes are necessary for competent management and to prevent operational failures.
“We’re losing 50% of the water that we pump that’s potable. That’s so far outside what is normative across the country. The replacement of pipes is probably responsible for some of this, but we’re spending money on so many other things than showing a fiduciary responsibility to the customer base,” Roberts said.
Changes to the BWWB have drawn strong opposition from Democrats in the Jefferson County delegation, who have filibustered similar pieces of legislation over the years over concerns that Birmingham and Jefferson County, the BWWB’s largest customers, would lose power over water decisions to suburban counties. Democrats have also noted that the changes would take power from Birmingham, which is 67% Black, and shift it to majority-white suburban counties.
Sen. Rodger Smitherman, D-Birmingham, who has led opposition to BWWB changes, declined to comment after the bill passed, saying that he’ll “talk about it once the governor signs it.”
Roberts said the changes came “after hard negotiations for several hours yesterday until late last night, and then again this morning,” which led to adding two additional members. Roberts said he preferred a board of five members because it would be easier “to get them pulling in the same direction.”
“We sat down as a Jefferson County delegation and hammered it out in a back room of what it would take to get this bill to pass without creating lots of problems for the rest of our colleagues here in the Senate and the House,” Roberts said.
The first amendment expanded the proposed board from five members to seven, adding one director appointed by the Governor and another by the governing body of the authorizing municipality, which would be the Birmingham City Council. Both appointees would have to live in Jefferson County. The second amendment requires the new regional board to include the authorizing municipality’s name, Birmingham, in its official title.
The bill specifies that certain board positions require financial, engineering, or general business backgrounds and sets initial staggered terms before transitioning to five-year terms, with a limit of two full terms. Directors will receive $2,000 per month plus expenses.
Frank E. Adams, a spokesperson for Birmingham Water Works Board (BWWB), said in a statement that despite amendments adding local appointees, the board strongly opposes the bill and sees it as a “hostile takeover by outside interests.”
“BWWB’s daily focus is continuing to make improvements to our customer service, infrastructure and the overall operations of the system. We have made significant improvement in those areas over the last few months and SB 330 limits that progress,” Adams said in the statement.
Board leaders previously indicated that operations are improving, according to al.com, and that monthly billing errors have been reduced to 500, down from 10,000.
The bill now moves to the Alabama House of Representatives for consideration. House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter, R-Rainsville, said the legislation will be a priority in the last few days of session.
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Alabama Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Alabama Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Brian Lyman for questions: info@alabamareflector.com.
The post Alabama Senate passes bill overhauling Birmingham Water Works Board appeared first on alabamareflector.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
The content discusses a recent legislative development in Alabama regarding municipal water governance, particularly focusing on a bill that restructures the Birmingham Water Works Board. The bill is sponsored by Republican Senator Dan Roberts and is framed in a positive light, emphasizing the goals of improved management and customer service. While the article does highlight opposition from Democratic lawmakers and their concerns regarding racial and regional equity, the overall tone appears to support the Republican-led initiative. The framing of the issues at hand suggests a predominance of conservative viewpoints surrounding the governance of public utilities, which aligns with Center-Right political perspectives.
News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Swimming Pool Safety | May 22, 2025 | News 19 at 10 p.m.
SUMMARY: Memorial Day weekend water safety is crucial, especially for children. Drowning is the leading cause of death for kids aged 1 to 4 and can happen quickly and silently. Experts recommend parents always supervise children near any water, whether a pool or lake. Early swim lessons, even starting in infancy, teach vital water survival skills like floating on the back to breathe and signaling for help. Backyard pools should have secure gates with locks. Using Coast Guard-approved life jackets and bright swimwear improves safety. Constant attention and communication among adults ensure children remain protected while enjoying the water.

Memorial Day Weekend is well-known as the kick-off to summer. Many neighborhood pools and waterparks start to open for the season this time of year.
News 19 is North Alabama’s News Leader! We are the CBS affiliate in North Alabama and the Tennessee Valley since November 28, 1963.
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News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Mobile Arena raises parking concerns, city officials say not to worry
SUMMARY: The new Mobile Arena in downtown Mobile will seat 10,000 people, raising parking concerns among residents. City officials, however, are not worried, citing experience handling large crowds during Mardi Gras, which brings in hundreds of thousands annually. The downtown area will have about 7,000 parking spaces after a new garage with 1,000 spots is built, expected to be completed by July. Officials expect many attendees to use rideshares or hotel parking, minimizing neighborhood street congestion. Police and transportation departments plan to manage traffic and parking challenges during events to ensure smooth flow.

New aerial renderings of the Mobile Arena, set to seat 10,000 people, are raising the question of where people will park.
FULL STORY: https://www.wkrg.com/mobile-county/mobile-arena-raises-parking-concerns-city-officials-say-not-to-worry/
News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Court order blocks Trump from eliminating U.S. Education Department
by Shauneen Miranda, Alabama Reflector
May 22, 2025
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Education must temporarily reinstate the hundreds of employees laid off earlier this year and cannot follow through on an executive order from President Donald Trump seeking to dismantle the agency, a federal judge in Massachusetts ruled Thursday.
The ruling stems from a pair of March lawsuits — one from a slew of Democratic attorneys general, another from a coalition of advocacy and labor groups — and blocks three Trump initiatives, marking a major blow to the president’s education agenda as his administration seeks to dramatically reshape the federal role in education.
The lawsuits challenge some of the administration’s most consequential education initiatives so far: a reduction in force effort at the agency that gutted more than 1,300 employees, Trump’s executive order calling on Education Secretary Linda McMahon to facilitate the closure of her own department and Trump’s proposal to rehouse the student loan portfolio in the Small Business Administration and special education services in the Department of Health and Human Services.
“A department without enough employees to perform statutorily mandated functions is not a department at all,” U.S. District Judge Myong J. Joun wrote in his 88-page memorandum and order granting a preliminary injunction.
“This court cannot be asked to cover its eyes while the Department’s employees are continuously fired and units are transferred out until the Department becomes a shell of itself,” wrote Joun, whom former President Joe Biden appointed.
Joun’s preliminary injunction took effect immediately and will remain until the merits of the consolidated case are decided.
A department spokesperson said the administration would immediately appeal the ruling. The agency has since filed an appeal.
Win for Democratic states
One of the cases comes from a coalition of Democratic attorneys general in Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New York, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington state and Wisconsin.
The other lawsuit was brought by the American Federation of Teachers, its Massachusetts chapter, AFSCME Council 93, the American Association of University Professors, the Service Employees International Union and two school districts in Massachusetts.
The department’s reduction in force plan prompted concerns from education advocates and leaders over how the agency would be able to carry out its core responsibilities after roughly halving its workforce, including major cuts to key units including the Office of Federal Student Aid, Office for Civil Rights and the Institute of Education Sciences.
Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, one of the largest teachers unions in the country, celebrated the ruling in a Thursday statement.
“Today, the court rightly rejected one of the administration’s very first illegal, and consequential, acts: abolishing the federal role in education,” Weingarten said.
“This decision is a first step to reverse this war on knowledge and the undermining of broad-based opportunity. For America to build a brighter future, we must all take more responsibility, not less, for the success of our children.”
Joun’s order also bars the agency from carrying out the president’s directive to transfer the student loan portfolio and special education services out of the agency.
Trump announced the proposal, which had no accompanying executive order, at the opening of an Oval Office appearance with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The department had told States Newsroom earlier this week that it had nothing new to share at this time regarding the proposed transfer.
Judge ‘dramatically overstepped’
Madi Biedermann, a spokesperson for the department, said the agency “will immediately challenge this on an emergency basis.”
“Once again, a far-left Judge has dramatically overstepped his authority, based on a complaint from biased plaintiffs, and issued an injunction against the obviously lawful efforts to make the Department of Education more efficient and functional for the American people,” she said in a statement shared with States Newsroom.
“President Trump and the Senate-confirmed Secretary of Education clearly have the authority to make decisions about agency reorganization efforts, not an unelected Judge with a political axe to grind. This ruling is not in the best interest of American students or families.”
Thursday’s ruling came just a day after McMahon took a grilling from U.S. House Democrats over the drastic cuts and proposed changes at her department during a hearing in a panel of the U.S. House Committee on Appropriations.
McMahon appeared before the lawmakers to outline Trump’s fiscal year 2026 budget request, which calls for $12 billion in spending cuts at the department.
Last updated 1:55 p.m., May. 22, 2025
Alabama Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Alabama Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Brian Lyman for questions: info@alabamareflector.com.
The post Court order blocks Trump from eliminating U.S. Education Department appeared first on alabamareflector.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
This content exhibits a left-leaning bias as it predominantly frames the Trump administration’s efforts to downsize and dismantle the Department of Education negatively, highlighting legal challenges led by Democratic officials and unions. The article emphasizes opposition from Democratic attorneys general and education advocacy groups, and includes critical perspectives on the administration’s actions, while using language that suggests concern about the impact of cuts. Although it presents responses from the Trump administration, the overall tone and emphasis favor the perspective critical of the reductions and administrative moves.
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