It's getaway day. First , the news report and quiz below. Thanks for reading, Ike |
|
|
The Alabama Public Library Service's board of directors elected state GOP chair John Wahl as its head, reports AL.com's Howard Koplowitz. The governor appoints a board member from each of the seven congressional districts. Wahl has been on the library board since 2022. There have been times in our history I'm sure when a library board election has gone fairly unnoticed and not drawn criticism, but Wahl's promotion comes at a time when public libraries have become a front in the culture wars. There are groups such as Clean Up Alabama that say they're trying to prevent children from having access to sexually explicit material in the libraries. Others, such as the group Read Freely Alabama, accuse the more conservative groups of targeting libraries for books with LGBTQ or racial-justice themes. Read Freely Alabama released a statement calling Wahl an "anti-library extremist" for aligning with Clean Up Alabama and Moms for Liberty. Back in January, the library service board voted to split from the American Library Association over how it categorizes sexually explicit material. |
|
|
Concern over migrant workers from Haiti, who have moved into many places in the country on a temporary federal work program, continue to roil small towns in Alabama. AL.com's Mike Cason reports that a couple of local officials in Enterprise tried to tamp down anxieties there through statements similar to that from majors and council members in other cities: They weren't given personal information about the newcomers, they've seen no increase in reported crime, and they have seen misinformation on social media. Mayor William Cooper acknowledged the possibility for unintended consequences of an influx of people and said he's communicating with law enforcement, the healthcare community, local school systems and other cities in a similar situation to monitor for problems. There was a meeting billed as "open to the public" last night at a church in Enterprise to discuss the migrants, although people there told one of our reporters to leave. A flyer advertising the event said it would have a former Trump advisor as a speaker. |
Warrior Met Coal has agreed to fix a coal slurry impoundment, stop wastewater from polluting a Tuscaloosa County waterway, and pay $250,000 per a settlement with Black Warrior Riverkeeper, reports AL.com's Margaret Kates. The wastewater has been leaking into a tributary of Texas Creek, which flows into the Black Warrior River. The environmental group filed a lawsuit in 2022 over 21 leaks it had documented since 2021. The deal also calls for Warrior Met Coal to place the impoundment in the Alabama Dam Safety Program. That means it'll face more monitoring and regulation by the local EMA. The company is reimbursing Black Water Riverkeeper $28,000 in legal fees. The $250,000 is going to the Freshwater Land Trust for a project in that river system. |
In 1925, doo-wop musician Bobby Nunn of Birmingham. He sang bass for The Coasters. In 1970, former Alabama and NFL defensive end John Copeland of Lanett. In 1973, former North Alabama and NFL linebacker Ronald McKinnon of Elba. |
If you miss that feeling of sitting down with in-depth, local reporting, consider subscribing to the Huntsville Times, Birmingham News, or Mobile Press-Register. By subscribing, you’ll get a new daily digital edition in an email link, or you can use an app to download the new edition every day on your smartphone or tablet. You also get exclusive access to stories written for our subscribers. “Down in Alabama” listeners get your first month free by going to al.com/digitalsubscription/exclusive and enter the promo code DIA24. |
|
|
Another listener joins us to take the weekly Alabama news quiz. You can find “Down in Alabama” wherever you get your podcasts, including these places: |
We appreciate you for taking the time to read today. Hope you're able to check back soon. Meantime, reply to this email with any suggestions you might have. If you're so inclined, we'd love it if you'd forward to friends who might be interested in reading. (And if you're someone who's been forwarded this newsletter, we encourage you to subscribe and get this in your inbox every day.) |
|
|
|