Gov. Kay Ivey told the Alabama state legislature that public safety is her top priority for the new session, reports AL.com's Mike Cason.
Ivey laid out her agenda in her eighth State of the State address Tuesday at the Capitol in Montgomery.
One piece of that will be an attempt to expand a Montgomery crime-fighting program called MACS, or the Metro Area Crime Suppression Unit.
With MACS, law-enforcement officers from numerous agencies -- ALEA, the Alabama Attorney General's Office, the Montgomery Police Department, the Montgomery Sheriff's Office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives -- collaborate to target violent crime and coordinate investigations.
In other words, we could see MACS Units show up in cities such as Birmingham.
The governor also wants to add legal protections for police. Alabama Law Enforcement Secretary Hal Taylor said the threat of civil and criminal actions against officers makes it difficult to recruit officers.
Ivey said she would support a state ban on Glock switches, a bill that would allow electronic monitoring of high-risk juvenile offenders, and a "Second Chance" act for some criminal offenders.
Also on the first day of the session, as expected, state Sen. Garlan Gudger, a Cullman Republican, won the vote to become the Senate's president pro tem.
Of this current legislative session, Gudger said priorities include protecting families and values, promoting government efficiency and transparency, and supporting the feds in fighting illegal immigration.
He also left a door slightly cracked open on lottery and other gambling. Cracked open just enough so that I could mention it here on this show for the 8,714th time in eight years. Gudger voiced concern over all the money Alabamians spend on other states' lotteries.
Don't cash out your 401K to invest in your lotto-retirement plan yet, though. Last year's annual gambling-package fail seems to have killed the energy behind the effort, and other legislative leaders have said a lottery package is not a priority this time around.