Alabama
Alabama’s public television board would kill itself to kill PBS
This is an opinion column.
Where to begin with the board that decides whether you get to watch Daniel Tiger or Ken Burns’ “American Revolution,” on Alabama Public Television?
Clown car? Kangaroo court? A Monty Python sketch, as one observer of the board’s meeting put it? Sure. But that’s way too kind.
Because it’s really a Trojan Horse.
There’s no way to watch the chaos at the Alabama Educational Television Commission without concluding that the goal of those who command this board is not to make better programming, or to draw more viewers, or to help Alabama’s public TV prosper. The goal is to strip the Alabama airwaves of anything that smells more like diversity of opinion than White House fan mail.
“Removing PBS here would be a major statement as to the direction Alabama Educational Television intends to take,” Board Chairman Ferris Stephens wrote to others at APT in October, when the move to rid APT of its most viewed programming came to light. “Because the state has benefitted WAY more from Trump being happy with Alabama and our political leaders are NOT interested in pulling on Superman’s cape over PBS programming.”
He said the quiet part out loud.
In the treatise obtained by AL.com, Stephens cited President Trump’s disdain for PBS, and its purported “lack of journalistic standards,” meaning it continues to question authority when Stephens and cronies would prefer a pack of fawning kits.
So burn it to the ground, and blame it all on PBS, the company that brought you “Sesame Street,” “Frontline,” “Nature,” “Nova” and that dastardly “Antiques Roadshow.” Blame it most of all on “PBS Newshour,” that news show that corrects its errors and abides by traditional journalism methods, but tries to reach audiences of all hues and faiths, thus becoming the wartiest witch in the hunt.
The thing is, PBS — “Austin City Limits,” “Finding Your Roots” — is the reason most people who support APT open up their wallets. Donations for the current year are expected to be about $4 million, or about 35% of the budget, according to their own estimates. Those donations give viewers access to Passport and all the PBS programming. Listeners and viewers who gathered at the meeting in Birmingham on Tuesday said they would withhold their money if that programming goes away, as they did in Huntsville when this same board made its radio station, WLRH in Huntsville, drop NPR.
This is not oversight. It’s a death panel.
And this board. Just consider this board, with its strong-arming chairman for life, a member who was appointed before the World Wide Web was a thing and another who lives on a continent 5,000 miles away.
Member Bebe Williams was appointed by Gov. Guy Hunt in 1991, a year and a half before the governor was indicted, two years before CNN propelled cable news to prominence in the first Gulf War. Williams is serving in her 35th year, with a term set to expire in 2033.
Board member Tijuanna Adetunji, who currently resides in Ghana, was appointed to the board 11 years ago but according to board minutes had not attended a meeting since April of 2023 until Stephens and board member Les Barnett – himself a member for 26 years now – began to push for the break from PBS last fall. She attended virtually in the fall and this week and supported them.
Stephens was appointed to the board by Gov. Bob Riley in 2009. He became chairman two years later and has held that position for 15 years, purging those who disagreed with him from the start.
He is likely to keep that job far longer. He took steps to assure it this week.
On Tuesday, out of the blue for some board members, Stephens informed the board that he had hand picked new members for the commission’s nominating committee, as well as the nominating committee to the Alabama Educational Television Foundation Authority, a related board that helps APT raise money from donors.
The members would be himself, Barnett, Adetunji and William Green Jr., a newbie with only six puny years on the board. Which pretty much assures Stephens will hold on to power, at least internally. For another chair to be considered, it would have to go through that committee.
He rammed through a vote for former Alabama Sen. Dick Brewbaker for the foundation board, over the objections of member Pete Conroy, who said he had nothing against Brewbaker but didn’t know him.
When Conroy tried to nominate another candidate later, Brewbaker blocked it, saying it had to go through the nominating committee.
“I would just ask that we do have a chance to actually meet them before …” Stephens began, but the crowd’s jeering drowned out the rest of his hypocrisy.
I asked Stephens after the meeting about his contradictory arguments. How he could stifle Conroy’s concerns while using the exact same arguments to justify his own.
“There’s no contradiction. There’s no contradiction,” he said, as if repeating it would make it true. “I just assumed everybody knew him (Brewbaker).
None of those items were on the agenda, and neither was one that brought cheering to the crowded meeting room. It would formally allow public comments at future meetings.
Stephens and Barnett voted against, saying listening to the public took too much time, it wasn’t the people’s place, and commissioners shouldn’t have to listen to the same arguments over and over.
But it passed, and now the board that runs Alabama Public Television has to listen and watch things they disagree with. Which is sort of a victory.
I asked Johnny Curry, a longtime GOP lawmaker and former head of the Jefferson County Republican Party who sits on the Alabama Educational Television Foundation Authority, if there were rules to this place at all.
“The rules are like sandlot baseball,” he said.
Stephens and his allies in these meetings seem to rationalize most of their decisions by citing the “Alabama values” Gov. Kay Ivey mentioned in a letter she wrote last year when the controversy began.
“I have worked hard to promote and defend Alabama values – from standing up for the sanctity of human life and our rights to religious liberty and standing against DEI, CRT, and boys playing girls’ sports” the governor wrote in the second paragraph of that letter. “For the sake of our people, it is imperative that APT’s programming align with Alabama values.”
What they don’t talk is the first paragraph, when the governor clearly says a disaffiliation from PBS “should be undertaken only after a thorough planning process and only with a thorough understanding of public opinion.”
Or the paragraphs that come later.
“The Commission should thoroughly survey Alabama voters to ensure their voices are heard,” insisting that a survey of voters be done by a reputable firm and be conducted over a sustained period of time.
“If the commission is going to disaffiliate from PBS, it should do so in response to trends in voter opinion, not just an isolated snapshot,” she wrote.
The rules on this board really are like sandlot baseball. If you’re playing to lose.
Alabama
In Alabama Primary Elections, Incumbent Utility Regulators Feel the Squeeze of High Energy Prices – Inside Climate News
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—For some incumbents, politics have turned sour in sweet home Alabama. In the May 26 primary election for two seats on the Public Service Commission, the state’s utility regulator, voters rejected one incumbent and sent another to a runoff.
The electoral shakeup comes as Alabamians are increasingly concerned about economic issues, including utility prices. Polling released earlier this year showed that 80 percent of Alabamians cite economic concerns as the top issue state leaders should address.
Now, Alabama politicians have gotten their first sense of voters’ attitudes this election cycle, and the message for incumbents charged with regulating utilities is one of frustration.
Commissioner Jeremy Oden, a Republican who has served on the body since 2012, lost his bid for re-election to Matt Gentry, who currently serves as sheriff of Cullman County, 75 percent to 25 percent.
Gentry will go on to face Democrat James O. Gordon in the November general election.
Another Republican incumbent on the PSC, Chris Beeker, also failed to garner the most votes from primary voters. Jim Zeigler, a perennial candidate who served on the body from 1975 to 1979, earned the most votes with 45 percent to Beeker’s 25. Because no candidate earned the majority of votes, Beeker will face Zeigler in a primary runoff election on June 16. The winner will face Democrat Sheila McNeil in November.
Electricity prices, in particular, have become a hot button issue across the country ahead of this year’s elections, including in Alabama, where power-hungry data center projects have begun to spring up across the state. In neighboring Georgia, utility cost increases and data center development became a major discussion in its own Public Service Commission elections, races that led to major Republican-to-Democrat flips and garnered headlines nationwide.
Read More
In the Wake of Georgia’s Blue Wave, Alabama Changed Its Utility Regulation Elections. This Black Democrat Is Suing.
By Lee Hedgepeth
Fear of a similar outcome in deep red Alabama has left some politicians nervous. During this year’s legislative session, lawmakers were forced to pull a bill that would have ended Public Service Commission elections altogether after significant public outcry.
In its place, the majority GOP legislature passed a major restructuring of the regulatory body that inflates its membership from three to seven members and consolidates significant regulatory power in a newly created secretary of energy to be appointed by the governor. The new law makes it more difficult to initiate a formal rate case, effectively barring such a hearing before 2029 and subsequently requiring the approval of the secretary of energy or five of seven commission members to do so.
Alabamians have good reason for concern over energy prices. An Inside Climate News analysis showed that Alabama Power customers paid the highest average residential bills among the 100 largest investor-owned utilities in the United States. Experts have pointed to the “regulatory capture” of bodies like the Public Service Commission as one reason for those high rates.
All of the successful candidates in this year’s PSC primaries have cited high utility bills as a reason for reform.
In the race for the Place 1 seat, Gentry’s 50-point primary victory over Oden came in the wake of Gentry’s pledge to call for the first formal public rate hearing overseeing Alabama Power’s electricity price increases since 1982. James Gordon, his Democratic opponent, has gone further, calling for regular formal rate hearings, an immediate 25 percent reduction in bills and consideration of a cap on the company’s annual profits.
In the bid for Place 2, Zeigler and Beeker will battle it out in the lead-up to their June runoff. Beeker is relatively new to the commission, having been appointed to the body in 2024 to serve the remaining term of his father, also Chris, a three-term incumbent, who resigned citing health concerns.
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Zeigler’s campaign has focused on pairing opposition to both large data center projects needed to power AI and solar farms for renewable electricity to harness local political passions, though his campaign’s website landing page features an AI-generated image as its background.
“They can ruin your community, consume water and drive your electric bills up. No one in Montgomery is overseeing this,” Zeigler said of data centers in a campaign video.
Beeker has taken a more traditional Alabama politics approach, nationalizing the issues and attacking what he labels “woke” left policies he claims without evidence are driving energy prices up.
Appearing in an ad holding his rifle on a farm, Beeker said he’ll fight for Alabama.
“As your public service commissioner, I’m again standing with President Trump against woke liberal environmentalists who are trying to kill Alabama jobs,” Beeker said.
As commissioner, Beeker has not yet called for a formal rate hearing on Alabama Power’s electricity prices.
McNeil, the Democrat in the race, did not face a primary challenger and has now begun her general election campaign in earnest. Her message? Power bills must come down.
“This is one of the most important positions on the ballot because it affects 1.5 million Alabamians,” McNeil said of the PSC races at a candidate forum earlier this month. “Utility rates are too high. They are some of the highest in the country. Something has got to be done because what has been going on for the last 20 years got us to where we are today.”
About This Story
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Alabama
Alabama raises income guidelines for WIC program
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) – Alabama has expanded income eligibility for the Women, Infants and Children nutrition program, known as WIC, meaning more families may qualify.
WIC serves people who are pregnant, postpartum or breastfeeding, as well as parents or guardians of children younger than 5. Applications are handled through local county health departments and WIC clinics.
WIC provides food benefits for each eligible family member, including a monthly cash-value benefit that can be used for fruits and vegetables. Each child receives $26 a month, pregnant and postpartum participants receive $48 a month, and breastfeeding participants receive $52 a month. Other approved foods include whole-grain bread and cereal, milk, cheese, yogurt, eggs, peanut butter, beans, canned fish and infant foods.
Participants can also receive nutrition education, breastfeeding support and health care referrals. Alabama’s WIC program issues benefits electronically.
| Family Size | Annual Income | Weekly Income |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | $40,034 | $770 |
| 3 | $50,542 | $972 |
| 4 | $61,050 | $1,175 |
| 5 | $71,558 | $1,377 |
| 6 | $82,066 | $1,579 |
Under the 2026 federal poverty guidelines, WIC is open to households with incomes up to 185% of the federal poverty level. Participants also must meet nutrition-risk requirements. Families already receiving Medicaid, SNAP or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families generally meet the income guidelines for WIC, though others may qualify as well.
Each unborn infant counts as one in the family size. For additional household sizes, see the Alabama Department of Public Health’s WIC information page.
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Copyright 2026 WSFA. All rights reserved.
Alabama
Alabama football to adopt HeatSense, cutting edge heat safety technology
Melissa Fortenberry saw a problem and sought a solution, a solution Alabama football is buying into.
Fortenberry invented HeatSense, a fitness tracker that measures athletes’ individual core body temperature with the “goal of proactively managing heat strain.” In August, Alabama will be Heat Sense’s first customer.
“They are all in,” Fortenberry told The Tuscaloosa News. “They very much want their player health to be at the top of the list.”
With a background in technology, Fortenberry came up with the idea of HeatSense as a fan, watching her three kids play youth sports in from the stands. She became sick, feeling dizzy and nauseous and coming to the conclusion that the pads and turf were hotter for athletes on the field.
Fortenberry conducted her own research and saw more reactive solutions than proactive.
“You can see heat strain forming in people and proactively cool them or keep pushing, where today, you’re flying blind,” Fortenberry said.
Jeff Allen, senior associate athletic director for health and performance and Alabama football’s head athletic trainer, has already been on the forefront of innovation for player safety, introducing the injury tent in 2015 to allow training staff and medical personnel to examine athletes privately on the sideline during games.
When Carson Tinker, a former Alabama and NFL long snapper and Fortenberry’s neighbor, heard about her idea, Allen was the first person Tinker thought of.
“Jeff was like, ‘Man, this sounds super interesting. Keep me in the loop with this,’” Tinker said. “It’s something he felt he knew that he could use. That was over a year ago now. … Now it’s all kind of come together. It’s crazy how it all kind of works out.”
“Once we got Jeff’s attention, he was really intrigued,” Fortenberry said, adding Allen “wants to be on the forefront of making the game better.”
Members of the HeatSense team attended an Alabama practice during its fourth-quarter program in March and put sensors on 10 players.
“I think the feedback they heard from players was validated in what we saw,” Fortenberry said.
Tinker views this not only as a safety tool, but an advantage overall to find a player’s peak body temperature.
“You want to be able to use the heat to your advantage. You want to be able to play your best in all conditions, but nobody knows until it’s too late and you got to get through in the cold tub because you overheated.”
Alabama is just the start for HeatSense, which has the goal of reaching three to five Division I programs this summer.
According to Weather Spark, the average temperature in Tuscaloosa eclipses 90 degrees during Alabama’s fall camp. Fortenberry now has a way for the Crimson Tide to respond.
“People, I think, are afraid of the heat, but you don’t know you can do something about it,” she said. “Now you can.”
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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