Supporters Say Constitutional Amendment Must Pass to Preserve Hundreds of Local Laws
When voters go to the polls next month, they’ll be voting on a proposed constitutional amendment that some say has to pass or cities and towns could be thrown into legal chaos. Supporters of Amendment 14 say without its approval, hundreds of local laws across Alabama could be wiped out by legal challenges. The list includes laws related to schools to local taxes to law enforcement.
The reason’s very technical and comes out of legislative procedure.
When Alabama lawmakers meet in a regular session, the first thing they’re supposed to do is pass the budgets. But in real life, that doesn’t happen. Instead lawmakers can pass what’s called a Budget Isolation Resolution or BIR and that allows them to consider a measure before the budget is approved.
Now according to a 1984 amendment, the Alabama Constitution requires a BIR to be passed by 3/5ths of a quorum present. But Alabama House rules say these resolutions only have to be passed by 3/5ths of those voting, which is a lower threshold. So for more than 30 years, lawmakers have passed legislation based on those looser rules.
The distinction came to light after a judge ruled last year on a Jefferson County plan to refinance school construction debt and use the savings for other items. He ruled it was unconstitutional because its BIR was not passed with the higher vote requirement. The case is on appeal. But if upheld, some lawmakers worry that more than 600 laws passed in the same way could be overturned through similar lawsuits.
“You could easily challenge all of them and win pretty easily in challenging all these local acts,” says State Senator Cam Ward (R-Alabaster), who sponsored the measure that put Amendment 14 on the ballot. If passed, it would say these laws in question would be considered legitimate.
“You could still challenge the constitutionality of the local bill,” says Ward. “But you couldn’t do it just based upon how the BIR vote was counted in the legislature, which is just a procedural issue, nothing that deals with the policy substance of the bill.”
Many organizations from the Association of County Commissions to the Business Council of Alabama are encouraging a yes vote.
But Birmingham resident Bob Friedman says “no.” He’s filed a lawsuit in Montgomery to block the amendment from the ballot. He says it’s an attempt to do an end run around the courts in the Jefferson County case that’s on appeal and that violates the separation of powers. Plus, Friedman says, the constitution wasn’t followed.
“Many people have known that the quorum procedure has been violated for years,” says Friedman. “you shouldn’t go to the voters to bail you out.”
Friedman acknowledges a no vote could open up a legal avenue to challenge all these laws, but he thinks the threat is overblown. He says it takes a lot of time and money to win a lawsuit so there wouldn’t be a proliferation of cases.
Senator Cam Ward calls Friedman’s lawsuit a stunt. He argues, if there were a violation, it’s the court that interfered with lawmakers by focusing on a technicality. But it is a technicality that could have far reaching consequences for cities and towns across Alabama.
Friedman Complaint by WBHM News on Scribd
How George Wallace and Bull Connor set the stage for Alabama’s sky-high electric rates
After his notorious stand in the schoolhouse door, Wallace needed a new target. He found it in Alabama Power.
FIFA president defends World Cup ticket prices, saying demand is hitting records
The FIFA President addressed outrage over ticket prices for the World Cup by pointing to record demand and reiterating that most of the proceeds will help support soccer around the world.
From chess to a medical mystery: Great global reads from 2025 you may have missed
We published hundreds of stories on global health and development each year. Some are ... alas ... a bit underappreciated by readers. We've asked our staff for their favorite overlooked posts of 2025.
The U.S. offers Ukraine a 15-year security guarantee for now, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday the United States is offering his country security guarantees for a period of 15 years as part of a proposed peace plan.
Genre fiction and female authors top U.S. libraries’ most-borrowed lists in 2025
All of the top 10 books borrowed through the public library app Libby were written by women. And Kristin Hannah's The Women was the top checkout in many library systems around the country.
The Best Tiny Desk Concerts of 2025
Which Tiny Desk made an audio engineer question everything? Which one made a producer want to cry? Touch grass? Look back on the year in Tiny Desk, with the people who make them.

