Alabama
Ivey awards $11.2 million to expand EV charging availability on Alabama's interstates – Yellowhammer News
Electric vehicles on Alabama’s interstates are about to receive a big boost thanks to $11.2 million in grant funding recently awarded by Governor Kay Ivey.
The money has been divided into fourteen individual grants. Thirteen will be going towards installing electric vehicle charging stations at fueling locations found across Alabama’s interstate system. The remaining grant will be given to Bevill State Community College in Jasper, to help train students on installation and the up keep of electric chargers.
“Having strategic electric vehicle charging stations across Alabama not only benefits EV drivers, but it also benefits those companies that produce electric vehicles, including many of them right here in Alabama, resulting in more high-paying jobs for Alabamians,” Governor Kay Ivey said. “This latest round of projects will provide added assurance that Alabamians and travelers to our state whose choose electric vehicles can travel those highways and know a charging station is within a reliable distance on their routes.”
ADECA Director Kenneth Boswell also emphasized the importance of the new funding.
“Alabama continues to make progress in installing charging systems for electric vehicles along major roadways,” Boswell said. “ADECA is pleased to support Gov. Ivey’s efforts to ensure that drivers who choose electric vehicles have access to dependable charging infrastructure as they travel the state.”
Grants awarded and project locations are:
Falkville
- $768,782 to Love’s Travel Stops & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its location at 64 East Pike Road, off Interstate 65.
Gadsden
- $331,807 to Silver Comet Energy Inc. to install four chargers at the RaceTrac Store, 1715 W. Grand Ave., near Interstate 59.
Hamilton
- $656,166 to Love’s Travel Stop & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its location at Marion County Highway 35, adjacent to Interstate 22.
Jasper
- $2.4 million to Bevill State Community College in Jasper to expand its current HVAC Training Center to include workforce training resulting in certification for the installation, testing, operation and maintenance of electric vehicle charging infrastructure.
- $788,921 to Love’s Travel Stops & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers its location at 83 Carl Cannon Blvd., near Interstate 22.
Heflin
- $656,166 to Love’s Travel Stop & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its location at 6647 Alabama Highway 46, adjacent to Interstate 20.
Tuscaloosa-Cottondale
- $581,200 to BP Products North America Inc. to install three electric charging stations at Travel Centers of America Tuscaloosa, 3501 Buttermilk Road, near Interstate 20/59.
Eutaw
- $783,299 to Love’s Travel Stops and Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its 7561 Mesopotamia Street location, adjacent to Interstate 20/59.
Clanton
- $660,909 to Love’s Travel Stops & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its store location at 300 Arby Drive, near Interstate 65.
Montgomery
- $581,200 to BP Products North America Inc. to install three chargers at Travel Centers of America Montgomery, 980 West South Blvd., adjacent to Interstate 65.
Fort Deposit
- $759,024 to Priester Retail Stores Inc. to install two dual-port chargers at it store, 80 Bishop Bottom Road, adjacent to Interstate 65.
Evergreen
- $867,238 to Love’s Travel Stops & Country Stores to install two dual-port chargers at its location, 16101 U.S. Highway 84, near Interstate 65.
Atmore
- $725,864 to Poarch Band of Creek Indians to install two duo-port chargers at Creek Travel Plaza, 4740 Jack Springs Road, near Interstate 65.
Irvington
- $639,564 to Love’s Travel Stop & Country Stores to install two dual-port charges at its location at 8400 County Farm Road, near Interstate 10.
Austen Shipley is a staff writer for Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on X @ShipleyAusten
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Alabama
Alabama adds commitment from in-state linebacker to 2028 class
The Alabama Crimson Tide have landed a commitment from Ryquan Butler, he announced Tuesday on social media.
An in-state prospect, Butler is Alabama’s fourth commitment of the 2028 cycle.
At the moment, Butler is currently unranked as a recruit, per the 247Sports Composite rankings, but that is likely to change in the near future ahead of his upcoming junior season at Alabama’s Loachapoka High School. There, Butler plays a number of different roles, but likely projects as a linebacker at the next level.
Following the commitment of Butler, Alabama’s 2028 class now ranks No. 2 nationally, per 247Sports. Butler is also now Alabama’s second 2028 linebacker commitment where he joins Dustin Henry out of St. Frances Academy in Maryland, as well as the Crimson Tide’s first from in-state.
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Alabama
TIDE HOOPS Alabama point guard commit Anderson Diaz reclassifies to 2026 cycle joins Crimson Tide program
Alabama
How the 2026 Rose Bowl made Alabama football quarterback Austin Mack
Austin Mack’s Rose Bowl story is well known. The Alabama football quarterback nearly predicted it himself.
In the middle of a hotel conference room days before the 2026 Rose Bowl, Mack, faced with countless questions on his Alabama future with an NCAA transfer portal window looming, remained assured. Everybody has their own journey, he said. He’ll be ready when his time comes, he said.
“I’m one play from playing in the Rose Bowl vs. Indiana,” Mack said in December. “That’s kind of where my mind’s at.”
Crimson Tide fans know the rest of the tale: Ty Simpson suffers an injury in the second quarter against Indiana, Mack enters as Alabama’s quarterback and leads Alabama to its only scoring drive of the day.
Nothing really changed. Indiana, the eventual College Football Playoff national champion, pounded Alabama 38-3, ending the Crimson Tide’s season.
But this story is not about a scoreboard. To those closest to Mack, it represented an opportunity, one he’d been waiting for, one that continues to be talked about as the turning point of a career defined by patience.
The Rose Bowl wasn’t perfect for Mack. But it was a chance. And that’s all that Mack and those close to him were waiting for.
‘He’s got this’
When Aidan Mack tells his version of the Rose Bowl story, he always starts with a caveat: he didn’t know what was happening.
Aidan, sitting with his parents Brad and Lisa Mack, was in the stands in Pasadena. There was no commentary, no context. Just actions and questions. The Macks didn’t know Simpson cracked a rib in the second quarter, nor did they know why Austin spoke with a member of the training staff as he walked off the field for halftime.
Austin Mack warmed up with Simpson heading into the second half, and continued to throw through a three-and-out to open the third quarter: the final plays of Simpson’s Alabama career.
Then Austin took the field. And immediate support fell on the Macks.
Julie Simpson, Ty’s mother, turned to Lisa, connected eyes and said, mother to mother, “He’s got this.” All Aidan could do was turn to his father, Brad, and say, “Here we go.”
“As a parent, you’re nervewracked,” Brad Mack said. “But watching him go out and operate, your heart just fills. It’s like, yes, he’s worked every day of his life for this moment right here.”
Brad, Lisa and Aidan Mack saw the quarterback they’ve always seen in Austin, one who came to life, one who confidently implored his offensive linemen not to look at the scoreboard and to simply play.
“It was a chance for him to go out and do what he does and be the guy,” Brad Mack said.
Austin showed athleticism. Austin showed maturity. Austin made throws. Austin made mistakes.
After years of waiting, that’s all Lisa Mack needed to see.
“That moment, I knew he could do the job,” she said.
‘It was incredibly rewarding for me’
Paul Doherty knows what Mack the starting quarterback looks like.
After two seasons of waiting, Mack had one season as Doherty’s quarterback at Folsom High School. But when Mack entered the Rose Bowl, production was not on Doherty’s mind.
Doherty was getting away from football, walking through an airport terminal after a quick San Diego vacation with his 8- and 10-year-old sons. One comment stopped Doherty dead in his tracks.
“Papa, Austin’s in the game.”
Suddenly nothing else mattered. Doherty found the nearest TV and watched.
Doherty knew what the moment meant. Mack dominated practice fields at Folsom, and whether he faced second-team reps or was leading the Bulldogs to a NorCal Championship against De La Salle, Mack never changed.
To Doherty’s two sons, Mack was an idol. As both sat in Doherty’s quarterback room during position meetings, they watched Mack take praise and criticism in stride. They watched Mack become a professional, soaking in lessons they may not realize until they are much older.
The process is what Doherty thought about while watching Mack at the Rose Bowl throwing completion after completion.
“It was incredibly rewarding for me,” Doherty said.
‘He is definitely capable’
Austin Mack’s Rose Bowl was something Kalen DeBoer had been waiting for, too.
Mack was in DeBoer and offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb’s quarterback room at Washington weeks after Mack’s 17th birthday. Mack showed his unwavering trust in DeBoer by following him and his staff to Alabama and remaining in his quarterback room despite hardly any significant reps through three seasons.
Mack is bought into the big picture. But DeBoer is also bought in. He saw, at the Rose Bowl, firsthand what Mack had developed into.
The energy came immediately, DeBoer remembers. Mack’s confidence and ability to execute quickly followed. There was no easing in, DeBoer said. Mack provided the spark, an inkling of light for the Crimson Tide to follow in the midst of extreme darkness.
“There’s an energy and a vibe you have about you, and he’s got that,” DeBoer told The Tuscaloosa News. “He’s a great teammate. I mean, a phenomenal teammate, and that’s not just what he wants to be. He’s going to be that naturally because that’s just who he is.
“He wants to be a starting quarterback. He wants to be the guy leading a team to a championship. He is definitely capable of that.”
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at cgay@gannett.com or follow him @_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter or Instagram @colingaytnews.
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