We're talking Alabama food with Bob Carlton over on the podcast, below we have efforts to stop unnecessary maternal deaths and a drone pilot in trouble at the Hangout Festival. Thanks for reading. Ike Morgan |
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The folks at the Alabama Department of Health are looking for more insight into maternal mortality in the state, and they're hoping that's what they'll get by taking an autopsy program statewide, reports AL.com's Amy Yurkanin. The program provides cost-free autopsies on women who died during pregnancy or within a year after giving birth. It's been in place since December in Baldwin, Jefferson, Madison, Marshall, Mobile, Montgomery, Shelby and Walker counties. Alabama has one of the nation's highest maternal mortality rates. AL.com's Anna Claire Vollers did reporting back in 2019 that showed there were issues with the state's tracking of expectant or new mothers who had died. The state then put a half million dollars into investigating the high mortality rate. Also, a maternal mortality review committee found that 15 of the 24 pregnancy-related deaths in Alabama in 2018 and 2019 were preventable. Infections, heart problems and hemorrhage accounted for the highest number of deaths. However, the ADPH says that autopsies are performed on only about half the pregnant and new-mom deaths. Enter this free-autopsy program, which is now being rolled out statewide over the coming months. Complete autopsies will be done at UAB and the University of South Alabama. |
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Alabamians are having a big week on reality television. Yesterday we had the story of a 12-year-old who won Gordon Ramsey's MasterChef Junior competition. Then, last night, Asher HaVon became the first Alabama native to win a season on NBC's The Voice, reports AL.com's Mary Colurso. His win in the finals wasn't a shock. The soul singer, who's originally from Selma, has been a frontrunner this season and was strongly championed by his team coach, Reba McEntire. A recording contract comes along with the title. |
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You can't say that the Hangout Festival environment isn't keeping up with the latest trends in illegal activity. Firing one up in the Port-a-Potty is archaic. AL.com's Warren Kulo reports that a man was arrested at this year's event after his drone buzzed a police drone, Gulf Shores Det. Carl Wittstruck said, "like in Top Gun." Police say the man launched on the first two days of Hangout. They figured out where it came from after the first day, so they were ready for it on the second day. There are federal laws regulating drones, but local rules can be spotty. Gulf Shores prohibits them from being flown over public beaches without a permit from the city and the Federal Aviation Administration. If you break that one, you could face up to a $500 fine and six months in jail. |
Katie Britt to talk childcare, and you're invited |
If you've tried to put a kid in day care lately, you know how tough it can be to find a spot, then be able to afford it. It's barely even a joke anymore when people say you really need to put a child on a waiting list before he or she is born. Policy wrangling on the issue is something that you might see play out over the coming months. So I wanted to let y'all know about a virtual event co-hosted by AL.com's Alabama Education Lab that'll feature U.S. Senators Katie Britt of Alabama and Patty Murray of Washington. Our Trisha Powell Crain will be one of the moderators, and it'll be at 2:30 p.m. Alabama time today. You can see it on AL.com's Facebook page or YouTube Channel. If you follow this Facebook event, you'll get an alert when they go live. |
“The practice of filing lawsuits and requests for stay of execution at the last minute where the facts were known well in advance is ineffective, unworkable, and must stop.” |
In 1914, the late jazz pianist Sun Ra of Birmingham. In 1959, humorist, author and speaker Andy Andrews of Birmingham and Dothan. |
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Veteran food reporter Bob Carlton is on the show to talk about food in Alabama. You can find “Down in Alabama” wherever you get your podcasts, including these places: |
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