Alabama
Time to get medical cannabis to Alabama patients, doctors say
Amanda Taylor of Cullman moved out west because the medical marijuana products that doctors said could help her multiple sclerosis and other health problems were not available in Alabama.
Taylor later returned to advocate for medical cannabis in her home state. She keeps a photo from the day she joined Gov. Kay Ivey and others at a ceremony to sign the bill that made medical marijuana legal in Alabama.
But three years after that triumphant moment, Taylor and other patients who need medical marijuana still cannot get it in Alabama.
Lawsuits and other problems have kept the state from issuing the business licenses needed to make and sell the products authorized by the 2021 law.
On Wednesday, Taylor joined several doctors, a former lawmaker, and a former Alabama mayor to call for an end to the legal stalemate.
“Businessmen and politicians are bickering over spoils while we suffer,” Taylor said. “There are people who are sick, suffering, and dying, and no one cares about the patients. It is time for these lawsuits to stop.”
The Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission, set up to regulate the fully intrastate industry, first tried to issue licenses a year ago, but lawsuits and problems with the AMCC’s procedures have kept products from becoming available.
The AMCC has issued licenses to cultivators, processors, transporters, and a state testing lab. But licenses for integrated companies and dispensaries remain on hold, blocked by lawsuits pending in the Montgomery County Circuit Court and the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals.
AMCC officials had said they hoped products would be available this year, but the litigation makes that uncertain.
A group called the Patients Coalition for Medical Cannabis held the event Wednesday in Montgomery and organizers said they will hold similar events in Mobile, Birmingham, Huntsville, and Dothan.
Dr. Corey Hebert, a pediatrician from New Orleans and medical professor at Tulane and LSU, said he has seen the how medical cannabis has helped patients in Louisiana. He gave the example of a condition called infantile spasms.
“I’ve watched a mother give their child medical cannabis and the seizures stop for the first time,” Hebert said. “And this was before this mother could get this medicine legally in Louisiana. So, she had to risk going to jail to drive to Colorado so that her child could not have seizures.”
Hebert said medical cannabis is an important treatment for PTSD and can help veterans who suffer from that condition.
Dr. Kirk Kinard, an osteopathic doctor who is president of the Pause Pain & Wellness, based in Oxford, Miss., said the company’s clinics have about 20,000 certified medical cannabis patients in Mississippi.
“We’re getting great feedback,” Kinard said. “My mission for Alabama is to bring our brand here so that you can scale up as quick as you can once everybody is through fighting over the legalities of it. It’s time for that to stop and go forward with something.”
Kinard, a member of the Mississippi State Board of Medical Licensure, said the first two years of medical cannabis in that state have shown that the products are safe. He said medical cannabis is an important option for treating chronic pain as an alternative to opioids.
“It doesn’t solve all the world’s problems,” Kinard said. “It solves a few very well, though. And the consequences of trying it and it failing are literally moving on to the next option.”
Dr. Marshall Walker of Mobile, whose practice focuses on pain management, said Alabama patients need the option of medical marijuana products like patients have in many other states.(Mike Cason/mcason@al.com)
Dr. Marshall Walker of Mobile, whose practice focuses on pain management, said his patients are eager to have the same options as those in other states.
“Cannabis is one of those things that quite frankly I need to fill the gap in pain control for people in Alabama,” Walker said. “My patients bring it up all the time. When are we going to get it, doc? When is it going to happen? Is it ever going to happen? Should I move?”
Walker said a medical cannabis product called Rick Simpson oil helped his mother, an esophageal cancer survivor, deal with the effects of radiation and chemotherapy.
“The Alabama Legislature did what we asked them to do,” Walker said. “Our elected officials delivered what we needed them to deliver. What we now need are the injunctions against us using the law that we have to go away, so we can do the good work like Dr. Kinard is doing in Mississippi and Dr. Hebert is doing in Louisiana.
“Why do our people have to suffer needlessly when on the other side of an imaginary line they don’t have to? It’s not fair to our people.”
Former state Rep. Mike Ball of Madison County, who championed the medical cannabis bill and earlier bills on CBD, and former Mobile Mayor Mike Dow also spoke at Wednesday’s event.
Former state Rep. Mike Ball of Madison County performs a song at Wednesday’s event advocating for the availability of medical cannabis in Alabama. Ball was the House sponsor of the bill that made medical marijuana legal in the state.(Mike Cason/mcason@al.com)
Taylor, a cosmetologist, said she asked her doctors years ago if medical cannabis could provide some relief for her multiple medical problems, which she said include MS, gastroparesis, type I diabetes, and PTSD. They told her it could but gave little hope that it would ever be available in Alabama.
“I packed up everything that I could fit in my car,” Taylor said. “And I literally became a medical refugee. And I went out west.”
Taylor, who said her weight had dropped below 90 pounds, moved first to California, then to Flagstaff, Ariz., where she landed a job in a medical marijuana dispensary. Taylor said she grew stronger from the medicine and documented the experiences of other patients that she talked to. She hiked in the mountains and recorded her thoughts in journals, and prayed about what she should do next in her life.
Taylor said God gave her a vision that she should return to Alabama and speak to the Legislature and a medical cannabis study commission that she should go door-to-door speaking to lawmakers. She said helped change some hard-core “no” votes to help pass the legislation. She keeps a framed photo of the day the bill passed the House. Ball was the House sponsor of the legislation, which was sponsored by Sen. Tim Melson, R-Florence.
Taylor said it is time to put the legislation to work for the people it was supposed to help.
“Who are these lawsuits serving?” Taylor said. “They’re not serving the patient. I’ve been suffering for three years. If it was all about me, I would have stayed in Arizona, where I had the keys to the kingdom. Literally had my own set of keys to the dispensary.”
“Where is the compassion that was promised? I see no compassion. I see greed.”
The law allows companies to make gummies, tablets, capsules, tinctures, patches, oils, and other forms of medical marijuana products. Patients who receive a medical cannabis card will be able to buy the products at licensed dispensaries.
The products can be used to treat a wide range of conditions, including chronic pain, weight loss and nausea from cancer, depression, panic disorder, epilepsy, muscle spasms caused by disease or spinal cord injuries, PTSD, and others.
Alabama
Is Tommy Tuberville an Alabama resident? GOP candidate challenges status
Watch AL governor candidate Tommy Tuberville speak on election night
See Tommy Tuberville speak on election night in Alabama
The Alabama Republican Party will hold a hearing on June 14 on a challenge questioning whether U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville meets the state’s constitutional residency requirement to run for governor.
The challenge comes from former GOP primary candidate Ken McFeeters, who argues Tuberville has not been a resident of Alabama long enough under state law.
McFeeters said he was notified Monday that the Alabama GOP steering committee will take up his residency at an upcoming hearing.
He has filed multiple challenges and a lawsuit contesting Tuberville’s eligibility, all focused on whether the senator meets Alabama’s seven-year residency requirement for governor.
Alabama Constitutional Residency Requirement for Governor
Under the Alabama Constitution, candidates for governor must be at least 30 years old, U.S. citizens for at least 10 years and residents of the state for at least seven years immediately before the election.
The dispute centers on whether Tuberville has maintained continuous Alabama residency under that standard.
Tommy Tuberville’s Campaign response
Tuberville, a former Auburn University football coach who moved to Alabama in 1999, has said he meets all eligibility requirements.
His campaign has released redacted federal tax returns covering multiple years in response to McFeeters’ claims.
Campaign chair Jordan Doufexis said the evidence will show Tuberville has long met the state’s residency threshold.
“We will submit a comprehensive response… demonstrating that he is a resident citizen of Alabama,” Doufexis said, adding the campaign is confident in its legal position.
Questions about Florida ties and past records
Tuberville’s residency has faced scrutiny for years, including reports citing ties outside Alabama.
Those reports have referenced a Florida driver’s license that remained active until 2023 and voting activity in Florida in 2018. Tuberville has pointed to Alabama property records and a homestead exemption tied to his family as evidence of residency.
McFeeters has also cited travel and expense records he says show Tuberville frequently traveled outside Alabama during the period in question.
The Alabama GOP previously rejected McFeeters’ residency challenge in February, allowing Tuberville to remain on the ballot.
Tuberville went on to win the Republican primary on May 19 with about 85% of the vote, easily defeating McFeeters and other challengers.
What happens if Tuberville is found ineligible?
If the committee were to rule against Tuberville, McFeeters could potentially become the Republican nominee for governor in the November general election.
He would then face Democratic nominee Doug Jones.
Jennifer Lindahl is a Breaking and Trending Reporter in Alabama for USA TODAY’s Deep South Connect Team. Connect with her on X @jenn_lindahl and email at jlindahl@usatodayco.com.
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.
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