Teachers, School Funding Among New Schools Chief’s Priorities
Eric Mackey is Alabama’s new superintendent of education. Before this, he was a lobbyist for state school superintendents. Mackey replaces former schools superintendent Michael Sentance, who was forced out after only a year on the job. Recently, Mackey supported Gov. Kay Ivey’s plan to arm school administrators at schools that don’t have a school resource officer. His conversation with WBHM’s Sherrel Wheeler Stewart begins with some of the larger issues around school safety.
Ivey in May introduced a plan called the Sentry Program that will allow administrators to use a gun to defend against an armed intruder.
We right now just don’t have the resources to put a resource officer in each school. So the Sentry program is a plan to say, if we can’t put a resource officer in the school, then how do we have a highly competent professional educator, a leader and administrator in the school, who can then also be trained in a secondary duty, so that under duress they would be able to perform as a deputy sheriff.
Addressing the top three challenges facing Alabama public schools — poverty, teachers, and funding.
We can’t get away from the fact that we are a high poverty state. Poverty is not indicative of intelligence though poverty is indicative of opportunity. We have to find ways to close the opportunity gap.
We have a teacher shortage in Alabama. We are already putting some things in place and working on that. Because we have a teacher shortage, we have some teachers in the classroom that are probably not up to speed. Most of our teachers in the classroom are committed professionals. They’re doing the best they can do. Some of them are doing an unbelievably good job.
The third thing is, we do always have to deal with funding — with making sure that we have resources in our classroom and resources across the state. Those things are interwoven too.
Transitioning from being a lobbyist for school superintendents to being their leader.
There are going to be some issues where we’re not on the same page. There always have been. Over 90 percent of the time, we’re all on the same page.
Alabama Power seeks to delay rate hike for new gas plant amid outcry
The state’s largest utility has proposed delaying the rate increase from its purchase of a $622 million natural gas plant until 2028.
Former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones announces run for Alabama governor
Jones announced his campaign Monday afternoon, hours after filing campaign paperwork with the Secretary of State's Office. His gubernatorial bid could set up a rematch with U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, the Republican who defeated Jones in 2020 and is now running for governor.
Scorching Saturdays: The rising heat threat inside football stadiums
Excessive heat and more frequent medical incidents in Southern college football stadiums could be a warning sign for universities across the country.
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor
The Gulf States Newsroom is hiring an Audio Editor to join our award-winning team covering important regional stories across Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.
Judge orders new Alabama Senate map after ruling found racial gerrymandering
U.S. District Judge Anna Manasco, appointed by President Donald Trump during his first term, issued the ruling Monday putting a new court-selected map in place for the 2026 and 2030 elections.
Construction on Meta’s largest data center brings 600% crash spike, chaos to rural Louisiana
An investigation from the Gulf States Newsroom found that trucks contracted to work at the Meta facility are causing delays and dangerous roads in Holly Ridge.

