Alabama's 2026 Legislative Session Delivers Record Results with Education Funding, Criminal Justice Reforms and Conservative Wins
Alabama's 2026 legislative session wrapped up with remarkable productivity, far exceeding expectations for an election-year affair, as lawmakers passed budgets, education reforms, and conservative priorities before adjourning sine die. According to the Alabama Policy Institute, the session achieved 29 of its 30 BluePrint proposals, including full funding for the CHOOSE Act's universal school choice program and reforms clarifying Education Savings Accounts for athletes.[1] Lawmakers also enacted Beau's Law, establishing misdemeanor penalties for neglecting dogs without proper food, water, or shelter, inspired by a high-profile animal cruelty case.[4] On the fiscal front, the Legislature approved a $3.74 billion General Fund budget with a 2% cost-of-living adjustment for state employees and a $12.4 billion Education Trust Fund package featuring teacher pay raises, CHOOSE Act funding, and retiree bonuses, all awaiting Governor Kay Ivey's signature.[4] Business incentives advanced too, with data center tax abatements reformed and the TRAIN Act enabling industry experts to teach career-technical education courses to address instructor shortages.[4] The Alabama Personal Data Protection Act passed, granting consumers rights over their data while imposing requirements on controllers.[4] Other measures included SNAP restrictions barring sugary items like candy and soda, pending a federal waiver,[4] and a temporary elimination of the 2% state sales tax on groceries for May and June.[4] Community-focused wins spanned criminal justice reforms, such as HB86 updating parole considerations for inmates' employment and education, and SB240 allowing virtual parole hearings, per the ACLU of Alabama.[2] The Religious Release Time Act enabled off-campus religious instruction during school hours, and bills promoted Ten Commandments displays and civics education.[1] No immigration bills passed despite seven proposals,[6] and a solar farm moratorium failed procedurally.[4] Public safety ef