LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF ALABAMA PROGRAM
2009-2011
as adopted by the LWVAL Convention on May 3, 2009
LWVUS SUPPORT POSITIONS
Impact on Issues contains the history and details of each of these
items.
LWVAL SUPPORT POSITIONS
The League of Women Voters of Alabama has also developed a series of program positions through the years. They are the result of study and consensus/concurrence on the part of the members of the League of Women Voters of Alabama. They have been adopted at different times and have different forms.
Budget Process
1987 (Updated 1995)
The League of Women Voters
believes that the state budgeting process should
be an open process that
includes public input in the setting of budgeting priorities, reflects programs
needed and wanted by the people of Alabama, and finances state programs
realistically.
The League, therefore,
supports action to
Campaign Finance Reform 1995
The League of Women Voters of
Alabama believes that the methods of financing campaigns should ensure the
public's right to know, combat corruption and undue influence, enable
candidates to compete more equitably for public office, and allow maximum
citizen participation in the political process.
Constitution Reform
1967 and 1973
(Updated 2002, 2009)
The Alabama Constitution should protect the people in the exercise of their civil liberties and provide a framework for government, broadly defining authorities, responsibilities, and relationships between branches of state government and between state and local governments. It should contain neither statutory law nor restrictive details that necessitate continual amendment.
I.
A broad grant of
authority should be delegated to those local governments that choose to adopt a
plan for home rule to enable them to address local problems independently of
the state legislature and/or the state electorate.
II.
The three branches of
state government should have authority sufficient to perform their distinct
responsibilities independently, and they should function as co-equals within
the traditional framework of checks and balances.
*Adopted in Amendment 339 in 1975
*Adopted in Amendment 328 in 1973.
III.
The taxation and finance
provisions in the constitution should provide for the flexibility to address
changing conditions, an equitable distribution of the tax burden, and the
economical use of the stateÕs financial resources.
A. In its provisions for public indebtedness,
1. The constitution should permit the state and properly
constituted local governments to engage in works of public improvement.
2. With reasonable safeguards, the state should be
allowed to finance capital improvements by issuing general obligation bonds
that pledge its full faith and credit, in order to secure more advantageous
rates than those for indirect borrowing through agencies.
3. Debt limitations in the constitution should be
expressed as a percentage of some reasonable measure of the stateÕs wealth, not
in monetary terms.
B. The stateÕs system of taxation should be broad,
equitable and efficient for the taxpayers of the state. It should balance
regressive and non- regressive taxes.
1. The constitution should contain no fixed tax rates.
2. The constitution should place no limitations on ad
valorem and income taxes.
3. The constitution should neither mandate nor prohibit
earmarking of taxes.
With
the prerequisite of an open accountable legislature, responsive to all the
people, the legislature should be allowed flexibility in tax decisions to meet
changing needs through statutory law rather than constitutional amendment.
C. To enable local governments to address local issues
independently of the state legislature, local governmental entities should be
granted taxing authority in their duly adopted plans or charters.
IV.
The League of Women
Voters of Alabama supports a convention of citizens for the purpose of
rewriting the state constitution.
V.
If the Alabama
Constitution authorizes initiative and referendum, the Constitution should
either contain safeguards in the initiative and referendum process to protect
representative and deliberative democracy, guarantee basic rights found in the
U.S. and Alabama Constitutions, maintain essential state services, and reduce
the influence of special interests or require that the legislature include such
safeguards in any enabling or other initiative and referendum legislation. (See
Legislature - Initiative and Referendum position.)
Election Law Reform 1972, June 1988, February 2009 (Updated 1995 and 2003)
The League of Women Voters
supports uniform election laws and procedures throughout the state to ensure
the integrity of the election system.
At minimum these elections
laws should include the following:
A. Simple and easy to understand procedures for
registration and voting.
B. Uniform residency requirements.
C. A statewide computerized voter registration system.
D. Uniform application of election laws.
E. Consistent use of terminology by election law and
election officials.
F. Uniform polling hours statewide from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.*
* Accomplished in 2003
G. Designation of the Secretary of State as the Election
Official for the State of Alabama. The Secretary should have the authority to
1. Prepare a specific, required course of instruction for
all election officials
2. Inform candidates of fair campaign practices.
Off-Site
Voting Adopted
February 21, 2009
LWVAL supports absentee voting
and early voting. The LWVAL also
supports a simplified application process and elimination of any requirement of excuses for absentee voting and early voting while
maintaining the integrity of the voting process.
.
Ethics in Government May, 1991
(Updated 1995, 2003)
Ethics law should provide
clear and enforceable state law regarding ethical conduct for
elected and appointed
officials, public employees and lobbyists. The law should establish
that public office will be
used for the public good and not private gain and should provide
a legal basis for public confidence in the integrity of government.
I. The Alabama Ethics Code should
1. It should have sufficient authority to perform its
responsibilities. The Commission should have subpoena powers and be able to
levy fines against those late in filing statements of economic interests.
2. The Commission should have guaranteed and adequate
funding.
II.
Statements of economic
interest must be submitted to the Commission by the following:
A. All elected public officials and candidates for
offices.
B. Appointed officials and public employees who are paid
$50,000 or more a year (the amount to be adjusted periodically).
C. Appointed or elected officials at any level of
compensation and holding any title who have the authority to make purchases in
excess of $1,000 or to collect or disburse funds.
III.
Public meetings should
be open to all citizens except during discussion of a personÕs character or
good name. Public officials should
be diligent in following the Open Meetings Law (Sunshine Law). The Open Meetings Law (Sunshine Law)
should be maintained and applied to the state legislature and its
committees; state boards, commissions and committees; and
regional, city and county commissions, councils and boards. Timely public notification
of these meetings should be required.
The state Open Meetings Law (Sunshine Law) should include a provision to
nullify decisions made in illegally conducted meetings.
IV.
Candidates for elective
office should be required to disclose all contributions and names of
contributors to their campaigns before the election. They should be provided
with timely individual notices of their reporting obligations.
V.
All governmental
entities in Alabama should be required to take sealed bids on their major purchases
and expenditures. These purchases
should be widely advertised to allow any qualified parties to bid and all bids
on a contract should be available for public scrutiny.
Finance and Taxation
January 1989
(Updated 1995)
The League of Women Voters of
Alabama supports action to reform the state system of finance and taxation.
Alabama's present regressive tax structure places the heaviest tax burden on
low income people, who pay a larger percentage of their income in state taxes
than any other income group. In addition, the present system of earmarking tax
revenues causes inequities in funding the responsibilities of state government.
The state revenue system should be broad and equitable.
The League, therefore,
supports the following as part of total tax reform:
A. Any new taxes which become necessary should be based
on ability to pay, in order to lessen reliance on regressive taxes.
B. The present mix of Alabama's taxes should be changed
so that there is more reliance on property tax and income tax and less reliance
(dependence) on general and selective sales taxes.
C. The sales tax on food should be eliminated, as it was
for prescription drugs, but sales tax exemptions that are designed to benefit
specific groups should be reduced.
D. Local government entities should be given more power
to tax themselves.
E. Any new taxes and any increased revenues resulting
from reform should not be earmarked. The LWVAL continues to support a revised
constitution that neither provides for nor prohibits earmarked taxes.
F. The constitutional restriction limiting the income
tax, Alabama's most progressive revenue source, should be removed.
G. There should be no constitutionally-fixed tax rates.
H. No specific monetary debt ceiling should be stated in
the constitution. However, the constitution should mandate a specific debt
limit that is a percentage of a reasonable measure of a state's wealth.
Legislature 2005
The
League of Women Voters of Alabama reaffirms its previous position that the
Legislature should be independent of the Executive Branch. The League supports the strengthening
of the Legislature that it may effectively function within the traditional
framework of checks and balances among the co-equal branches of government. The League also reaffirms its
support in previous positions for constitutional guarantees of adequate
representation for all citizens and annual meetings of the legislature for
which legislators receive an adequate salary.
I.
Leadership Selection
The
internal leadership of the House and Senate should be elected by the membership
of each chamber. As part of this
position, the League reaffirms its support for the independent election of the
Speaker by the members of the House as an essential aspect of its support for
the separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches of
government.
II. Assignment of Members to Committees
Assignment
of members to committee should be based on several criteria, the most important
of which is member expertise in the subject matter handled by the
committee Additional factors
that should be considered include party ratios within the chamber, race and gender.
III. Standing Committees
The
committee system, which is the core of the legislative process, should receive
continuing attention with the aim of preserving existing strengths and
eliminating the weaknesses.
A. Jurisdictions and Numbers
1. The legislature should clearly define
committee jurisdictions and consistently assign bills based on jurisdictions,
in order to strengthen the committee system and enhance the ability of
committees to evaluate bills based on committee expertise.
2. The Legislature should use
clearly stated efficiency and effectiveness criteria for determining the
appropriate number of standing committees.
B.
Duties and Operation
Each chamber should maintain and adhere to written
rules related to the duties and operations of all standing committees. At minimum these rules should provide
for the following.
1.
Clear jurisdictional
lines for each committee.
2.
A requirement that all
legislation be sent to and handled by committees based on jurisdiction.
3.
Selection of all
committee chairs by a vote of the membership of the committee regardless of
party affiliation.
4.
Mechanisms for the
members to call committee meetings should the chair fail to do so.
5.
Open committee meetings
to ensure public access to deliberations.
6.
Provisions for roll call
votes.
7.
Timely Internet posting
of committee meetings including time, place and agendas.
IV. Legislative
Staff Support
A.
Nonpartisanship
The staff for all legislative support offices should
be nonpartisan and professional.
B.
Staff
1. The
nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Office (LFO) should be maintained.
2.
Objective legal advice
should be available to all committees.
3. A nonpartisan policy analysis
office should be established by the legislature. Priority in the officeÕs research assignments should be
given to requests for research from committee chairs and chamber leadership.
4. Adequate clerical staff for members
should be provided in their Montgomery offices. Clerical staff for state legislators in their districts
should not receive state funding.
5.
Funding for the policy
office and any expansion of clerical support should come
in part
from thorough reexamination of current legislative funding and possible
reallocation of these funds.
V. Public
Access to Information
The Legislature should place the following on the
internet to ensure that the media, citizens, and others have access to the
information needed for informed participation in the political process.
A. Legislative budgets including the
specific amounts budgeted to and spent by:
1. funds
for each chamber, the leadership, and the various standing committees.
2. discretionary
fund monies disbursed by the House and Senate leadership; and
3.
discretionary funds under membersÕ control.
B.
Information about all
legislative meetings (chamber and committee) specifying time,
exact location, and agendas
prior to their occurrence, with such posting allowing
sufficient time for interested
parties to attend the meetings.
C. Roll call votes on bills
and amendments.
VI. Lobbyists and Lobbying.
Lobbyists play an important role in the transmittal of
information to legislators, but regulation of lobbying is necessary in order to
prevent corruption and instill public trust. The League therefore supports the following:
A.
Because campaign funding
and the threat of its withdrawal is a major lobbying tool
that may result in undue
influence, the League supports a law to ban PAC-to-PAC
transfers.
B.
The current $249 limit
on the amount a lobbyist is allowed to spend on each legislator and his/her
family per day without disclosure should be substantially reduced.
C. Registration Process Changes
1. Once registered, lobbyists are required to
register new clients within 10 days.
The 10 day period should be reduced.
2.
Internet postings should
be used to allow lobbyists to register and to update their
registrations, including
registration of new client information and to pay filing
fees online.
3.
To ensure enforcement of
the regulations, the League reaffirms its support for
adequate funding of the Ethics
Commission.
VII. Initiative
and Referendum Adopted
February 21, 2009
A. The League of Women Voters of Alabama recognizes the
value of an initiative and referendum process that allows citizens to take a
role in initiating and voting on both laws and constitutional amendments. Currently, Alabama does not have
initiative and the only form of referendum (voter approval or rejection of a
legislative enactment) now in place applies to constitutional amendments. The state legislature must place its
proposed constitutional amendments with statewide application on the ballot for
voter approval.
B. The LWVAL believes strongly that the right of citizens
to vote on constitutional amendments as now provided in the Constitution of
Alabama must be preserved.
C. If Alabama adopts an initiative and referendum
process, the LWVal believes that
the process must embody safeguards to protect
representative and deliberative democracy, to guarantee basic rights found in
the U.S. and Alabama Constitutions, maintain essential state services, and
reduce the influence of special interest politics. Standards are needed both for the certification of an
initiative proposal and for the referendum in which voters approve or reject
it. The safeguards that the League recommends
include:
1. Proposal Preparation
a. Limit each proposal to one subject.
b. Explicitly bar propositions that would abrogate rights
granted in the U.S. and Alabama Constitutions.
c. Require initiative sponsors to file with a designated
state official (e.g., Secretary of State) before collection of petition
signatures begins
i. the proposed initiative and title as they would appear
on the ballot
ii. a copy of the actual petition to be circulated; and
iii. clear identification of initiative sponsors
d. Mandate an impartial expert review of proposal wording
before collection of petition signature begins to ensure the proposal
i. is constitutional
ii. makes clear what a ÒyesÓ vote and a ÒnoÓ vote means in
practice, and
iii. uses language that is not offensive The review agency/agencies should be
respected nonpartisan organizations such as the Legislative Fiscal Office,
Legislative Reference Service, or Alabama Law Institute.
e. Bar the filing of a defeated proposal until at least
two years have passed.
2. Signature Collection
a. Set a reasonable time limit for the period within
which petition signatures must be collected.
b. Require signatures from registered voters only.
c. Require that signatures be collected from all areas of
the state.
d. Base the minimum number of valid signatures needed on
the number of votes in the last gubernatorial election.
e. Set the minimum number to initiate a constitutional
amendment higher than for initiating a statute.
f. Require that all organizations working to gather
petition signatures periodically file financial disclosure forms with the
appropriate state office.
3. Campaign for Passage and the Vote
a. Require validation of petition signatures for
placement on the ballot.
b. Place proposals only on general election ballots.
c. For proposals related to statutes, require only a
simple majority for passage. Set
the number higher for constitutional amendment initiative proposals.
d. Require an impartial analysis of the effect of the
measureÕs passage on existing law, current levels of service, and fiscal
consequences. This information should be disseminated as widely as
possible. The review
agency/agencies should be a respected nonpartisan organization such as the
Legislative Fiscal Office, Legislative Reference Service, or Alabama Law
Institute.
e. Set a limit on the number of initiatives that may be
placed on the ballot in any one election.
f. Require that all initiative sponsors periodically file
financial disclosure forms with the appropriate state office.
4. Legislative Role
Serious
consideration should be given to allowing for legislative action on an
initiative in the session that follows the certification of the petitions. Legislative adoption of a statutory
initiative as filed would mean the initiative could become law without a vote
by the people. If the
Legislature offers an alternative measure, both versions would go on the
ballot. Should the legislature
fail to act on the proposed initiative, the initiative would go directly to the
voters.
See related issues under Constitution Reform
position
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION January, 1999
The League of Women Voters
believes that the state of Alabama, like most other states, should share in the
fiscal responsibility for providing public transportation as it does for
highway construction. Public
transportation is defined as those forms of surface transportation which serve
the public as a whole as opposed to the private automobile. These include, for example, fixed
pools, park-and-ride lots, light and intercity rail, but not highway
construction. In order to provide
a stable funding source without further earmarking, this function should be
included in the existing constitutional mandate earmarking gasoline and some other
vehicle taxes for construction and maintenance of highways and bridges
only. It believes further that
local governments should be given the freedom to tax themselves for
transportation needs without prior legislative approval.
HUMAN RESOURCES
Criminal Justice
1975, 1976, 1977 and 1979
(Updated 1995 and 2003)
The League of Women Voters
favors an adequate budget to support
criminal justice needs throughout the state.
In order to deal with the
problems of reintegration of offenders into the community and to minimize the
use of traditional incarceration, the League of Women Voters supports maximum
efforts to expedite trial and to ensure swift and consistent justice. It also supports the concept of rehabilitation
as a major goal of the criminal justice system.
The League recognizes the
need to deal with the special problems of the juvenile offender by the
development of programs and policies designed to aid in rehabilitation and
prevention of further delinquency.
I.
The League supports the following
actions in relation to bail and pre-trial confinement:
A. Reform of bail and pre-trial release practices with
use of release on recognizance when possible. Cash bail should not discriminate
against the poor, should be administered through the courts, and should be
publicly accountable.
B. Revocation of release for noncompliance with the terms
of release, should occur only if the accused has had adequate notification of
appearance, place and time.
C. According persons held pending trial the presumption
of innocence and the privileges consistent with this assumption.
D. Granting the right to appeal a decision to detain
pending trial.
E. Crediting to a sentence all time spent in custody
pending trial.
F. Use of citation or summons by appropriate officials
rather than arrest procedures where appropriate.
G. Use of counseling programs as alternatives to pretrial
detention.
H. Provision of medical treatment in a medical
environment when needed for those held in custody.
II. The League supports
the following actions with regard to the Alabama prison system:
A. Use of a classification system run by adequately
trained personnel.
B. Rehabilitation opportunities offered for all inmates
regardless of the length of their sentence or the offense committed. We support
programs focusing on substance abuse as well as assistance to inmates in
overcoming a lack of education. Emphasis should be placed on basic skills with
a high school equivalency diploma as the minimum goal.
C. Priority given to prison industries that provide
inmates with vocational training that they can use after release.
D. Minimizing the use of traditional incarceration.
Should more prisons be built, smaller minimum security facilities should be located
in areas where work release opportunities exist.
III. The League supports the following
actions in the area of juvenile justice:
A. Creation and maintenance of a family court system.
B. A standard maximum legal age for juveniles set at 18.
C. Creation and maintenance of community facilities to
treat status offenders under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.
D. Coordination by the Department of Youth Services (DYS)
of services for delinquent youth and status offenders, including services provided
by private agencies regulated and subsidized by DYS.
E. Establishment of uniform standards and procedures for
the screening and diversion of juvenile offenders to non institutional programs
and agencies.
F. Uniform probation services supported by state funding.
G. Appropriate time limits on periods of
institutionalization rather than indeterminate periods.
H. Use of parole for juveniles held in state juvenile
institutions.
I. Community aftercare programs and local case worker
supervision for those released from juvenile institutions.
Day Care 1984 (Updated 1995 and 1977)
The LWVAL believes quality
day care, defined in its broadest sense to include child care,
elder care, and care for
those disabled, should be available to those who need it.
To
accomplish this goal, we support the following:
A. The development of a variety of resources to meet the
need for quality day care, both full-time and part-time, including before and
after school child care. Employers, private day care providers and government
should be encouraged, with the aid of such devices as tax incentives, to help
make quality day care affordable for all families.
B. Licensing should ensure that acceptable standards are
maintained. The licensing standards should be enforceable and allow variety in
programs. Exemptions from the standards should not be permitted. Enforcement of licensing standards
should be conducted by qualified staff with manageable case loads, and
sufficient power to close unsafe day care facilities.
C. Consultation services and training should be offered
for providers to improve quality.
D. Zoning regulations for day care should be consistent
with zoning for elementary schools and churchs.
Department of Human
Resources 1987
(Updated 1995, 1997 and 2003)
The LWVAL advocates taxes sufficient to support social welfare programs. The Department of Human Resources (DHR) must have adequate funding in order to administer those programs designed to deliver services to the needy. The federal government should be responsible for the bulk of financial assistance; however, state and local governments should share in the costs of their programs. DHR services should not be reduced. When needed, additional funding for DHR should be provided from the General Fund Budget.
The state should appropriate
adequate money to:
A. Fund any federal government shortfall in the food
stamp and welfare cash benefit programs from the General Fund, if necessary,
rather than reducing services.
B. Increase welfare cash benefit payments.
C. Maintain and expand, when possible, existing programs
such as the statewide work program, assistance to two-parent families in need,
protective services for abuse prevention and early intervention, and in-home
care services to the elderly, blind and disabled.
D. Work toward a General Assistance Program to help those
in need who are not eligible under existing programs.
Education 1964, 1966, 1980, 1984, 1985, 1999 (Updated 1995, 1997,1999, 2003)
The League of Women Voters of
Alabama supports maintaining and improving a system of free public schools in
Alabama based on the belief that a free public education which provides equal
opportunity for all its citizens is an investment in the future.
Improvement may be achieved
through action in support of the following:
I.
Legislation that will
assure adequate financing for the total needs of Alabama public schools. Such legislation should create a
long term program for quality education.
II.
Provision of free
textbooks for public schools as part of a total needs approach.
III.
Creation and maintenance
of a process for selecting and distributing free textbooks. That system should
meet the following criteria:
A. Selection and final adoption of textbooks by a
committee composed of outstanding members of the teaching profession chosen by
methods free of political influence.
B. Selection of the best textbooks nationally available
based on valid educational objectives.
C. Ordering and distributing textbooks on a nonprofit
basis by the State Department of Education and the local Boards of Education.
IV.
Continued federal
funding of the following current
K-12 programs, which schools with a low level of local support could not afford
without federal funds. These federal programs, which contain no requirement for
a national curriculum, include the following: child nutrition, special education, Title I (supplementary
instruction in reading and mathematics),
professional development
for science and mathematics teachers, equipment and teachers for
vocational education, and programs
aimed at helping children at risk and providing a safe, drug-free environment.
V.
Extension of pubic
kindergartens, including support of permissive legislation enabling counties to
conduct such programs.
VI.
The League of Women
Voters believes that an excellent higher education requires improved
cooperative planning, coordination, and equitable support for the public
institutions of higher learning in Alabama. Granting appropriate authority to the Commission on
Higher Education (ACHE) and improved teacher training are two means of
achieving excellence.
A. In regard to ACHE the League of Women Voter supports
the following:
1. Sufficient authority for ACHE to carry out its
mandate.
2. Mutual efforts by ACHE and the institutions of higher
learning to eliminate unnecessary duplication of programs.
3. A study by outside consultants of the stateÕs needs in
medical education emphasizing the possibilities of consolidation of existing
facilities.
4. Identification of the strengths and future needs of
engineering education within the state.
5. Implementation of ACHEÕs study based on long term
planning recommendations that support League positions.
B. In regard to teacher education, the League supports
the following:
1. Maintenance of high admission standards for entry into
the institutions of higher education with greater emphasis on standardized test
scores and preparation in mathematics, computer skills, and foreign language.
2. Programs of teacher education which
a. Include preadmission and interim evaluation of all
degree candidates.
b. Emphasize subject matter expertise.
c. Provide additional training for teachers already in
the classroom.
Health Care
1986 (Updated 1995
and 1997 and 2003. Revised 2009.)
The LWVAL supports access to
basic health care services for all Alabama citizens. This object should be accomplished through an equitable
planning regulatory system that is subject to checks and balances and
representative of both consumers and providers, and through the development of
delivery systems that take into account the specific needs of children, the elderly, rural and
disadvantaged persons. Access to
basic health care is a universal human right that should be met by an expanded
network of providers and coordination among providers.
The League of Women Voters,
therefore, supports action on the following:
A. State public health planning should be organized to
ensure that the deliberations and recommendation of the decision-making boards
and committees are ultimately accountable to the people of Alabama. Their
placement in the organizational structure of the executive branch and their
interacting authorities should promote independence from political
considerations.
B. The main criteria for processing Medicaid contracts
should be quality of service and qualified reviewers.
C. Eligibility for treatment should be based only on
medical considerations.
D. Conformity with federal regulations on the use of new
techniques or advanced technology should be maintained.
E. Decisions of the Certificate of Need Board relating to
allocation of new or expanded sites for health care facilities/agencies and
technology should be based on strict adherence to regulations accurately
reflecting the needs of the
population to be served.
F. An aggressive campaign to reduce infant mortality
should include access to an adequate number and location of affordable quality
prenatal services such as mobile clinics, utilization of a variety of qualified
medical professionals and provision for a variety of educational strategies
about family planning and prenatal care.
G. The indigent care load should be shared by all health
care providers, both public and private.
H. Counties should be required to pay for health care for
their indigent population, but the cost of care should be billed through the
state in order to speed up the collection of monies and to provide records
reflecting the magnitude of the problems.
I.
Emphasis on health maintenance
and disease prevention should be encouraged through establishment of and access
to wellness clinics or programs throughout the state and through public
education about healthy lifestyles.
NATURAL
RESOURCES
Natural Resources 2003
LWV of Alabama supports
measures to promote an environment beneficial to life through the protection of
natural resources in the public interest.
In agreement with the position of the LWVUS, the LWVAL believes that
natural resources should be managed as interrelated parts of healthy
ecosystems. Resources should be conserved and protected to assure their future
availability. Pollution of these resources, especially air and water, should be
controlled in order to preserve the physical, chemical, and biological
integrity of the environment and to protect public health.
Coastal Zone Management 1980
(Updated 2003, 2009)
Recognizing its particular
environmental issues and the unique value of the Alabama Gulf Coast to the
state, LWVAL supports increased
attention to identifying adverse impacts on the coast by the ecosystems of the
entire state and establishment of regulations and enforcement mechanisms to
prevent or to mitigate those impacts. LWVAL also sees the need for new assessments of
coastal conditions and new regulations to address problems, including those caused or revealed by storms and development, in order to secure the future ecological health of
the region in the face of the increased growth in coastal communities.
I.
Standards and guidelines
to protect the coastal ecosystem should be developed and periodically revised,
based on the latest scientific research and methodology, and adjusted to
specific coastal needs.
Enforcement standards should include stiff penalties for infractions,
repeated failures, and negligence.
These coastal standards and guidelines should address the following:
A.
Water quality regulation
should protect sources of drinking water, prevent polluted runoff, manage storm
water, and mandate the best methodology for sewage treatment and
management. State and local
regulations should meet or exceed Federal Clean Water Act requirements.
B.
Natural features that
serve as defenses against hurricane winds and saltwater surges should be
protected, including dunes, barrier islands, bays, estuaries, grass beds, and
wetlands.
C.
The Gulf of Mexico
should be protected as a viable habitat for marine life by paying special
attention to natural flow patterns and outflows from bays and rivers and
assessing the detrimental effects of human activity.
D.
The quality and quantity
of estuarine waters flowing through wetlands needs to be adequate to support
the bio-regeneration of life that takes place there.
E.
Quality of life and
features of natural worth, such as the coastal causeway, coastal forests,
Mobile Bay, the dunes, wetlands, state parks and wildlife habitats should be
preserved and kept vital and healthy.
Public access to beaches and navigable waterways should be ensured.
F.
Special protections
should be considered for especially sensitive water bodies that impact coastal
ecosystems.
II.
Environmental impacts
should be considered and regulated for rebuilding and new development on the
coast and for every new coastal enterprise that could adversely affect the
coastal environment or ecosystems.
At minimum, such actions should include:
A.
Comprehensive land use
planning that will protect the coastal environment to ensure health, safety,
and quality of life.
B.
Coordination of planning
for municipalities and for unincorporated areas.
C.
The identification,
mapping and protection of fragile areas.
D.
Regulations to control
adverse environmental impacts related to construction and to limit any
preventable sediment accumulation, in addition to addressing the protections
listed above.
III. LWVAL supports reform of the present state and local
regulatory and enforcement systems for environmental standards on the coast to
encourage, facilitate, and enforce public and private cooperative efforts
across political boundaries, including the possible creation of one or more
regional authorities with enforcement powers. Structural changes should separate licensing from
enforcement and from administration of rules and regulations to ensure
accountability.
A Study: Health Care in Alabama
Adopted May 3, 2009
LWVAL hereby undertakes a
study of the current health care conditions and policies in the state of
Alabama, and on barriers to health care in the state, focusing on cost, access,
and the quality and equity of care.