Saturday January 28, 2012

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The Alabama House of Representatives is not currently in session. The 2012 Regular Session will convene on Tuesday, February 7 at noon.
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Welcome to the official website of the Alabama House Republican Caucus.

House Republicans have revamped our online presence to offer constituents an inside look at developments in the State House. Please use this new website as an information portal, and a source for sharing the latest on legislative issues with your friends and family.

Please take full advantage of this site throughout the 2011 regular session as we update bills and videos weekly in effort to show you our progress. For even faster information, be sure to follow us on Facebook and Twitter. It's just one more way we are working to move Alabama forward.

Sincerely,
Representative Micky Hammon | House Majority Leader
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Unemployment Rate Falls in Alabama

This week we’ve seen more great news for Alabama, as our state’s unemployment rate has dropped sharply from 10 percent in July to 8.1 percent last month.  That’s proof that House Republican’s pro-growth economic policies are working and we’re heading in the right direction.  However, if this recession has taught us anything it is that we must keep innovating and finding ways to give Alabama a competitive advantage in economic development. That’s why the Republican lawmakers are proposing a slate of bills that will give our state more tools to recruit new industry and help existing industry expand.  Additionally, we also want to make the necessary investments in our workforce development platform so we can give unemployed workers the training they need to fill these jobs.

Be sure to check out the following articles to learn more about the declining unemployment rate across our state:

ANNISTON STAR:“Alabama’s unemployment rate takes a big drop again”

BIRMINGHAM NEWS: “Alabama, Birmingham unemployment rates drop in December”

DOTHAN EAGLE: “Houston County unemployment drops  to 7.1 percent”

GADSDEN TIMES: “Local, State jobless rates drop; Etowah rate down for six straight months”

HUNTSVILLE TIMES: “Madison County’s unemployment rate drops to 6.4 percent in December”

HUNTSVILLE TIMES: “Madison County’s jobless rate in December reaches lowest since 2009″

MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER: “State’s unemployment rate continues decline”

NEWS-COURIER: “State, local jobless numbers drop again”

OPELIKA-AUBURN NEWS: “Jobless rate in Alabama, Lee County going down”

TIMES-DAILY: “Alabama’s unemployment rate now below national rate, Shoals counties improve”

WKRG-TV: (VIDEO) “Jobless Rate Lower in Baldwin County”

Posted in Newsflash, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

GOP wants to create jobs during Alabama session

By Bob Johnson
The Associated Press
Original Article Published:Thursday, Janary 12, 2012

MONTGOMERY | Republican leaders in the Alabama Legislature said Wednesday that their priority at the beginning of the 2012 regular session next month will be to pass bills that will encourage businesses to create jobs.

Senate President Pro-Tem Del Marsh said the first bills he expects to come up for consideration in the Senate are measures that will provide incentives for businesses that create new jobs and for new industries that bring jobs into the state.

House Speaker Mike Hubbard told the Birmingham Rotary Club that the Republican leadership in the House is proposing a slate of bills that will give the state more tools “to recruit new industry and to help existing industry expand.” Hubbard of Auburn was the first Republican speaker in Alabama in more than 130 years.

“We must keep innovating and finding ways to give Alabama a competitive advantage in economic development,” Hubbard said.

“The number one issue we are dealing with is jobs. We have a whole package of bills that will stir the economy,” Hubbard said later Wednesday.

A Republican from Anniston, Marsh said “anything that we consider job producing legislation if going to be a priority” early in the session, which begins Feb. 7.

Alabama’s unemployment rate was 8.7 percent in November, an improvement from previous months, but Marsh said he would like to see it drop much lower.

“I would honestly love to see it get to 5 percent,” Marsh said.

Marsh said he doesn’t expect legislators to pass budgets until later in the session when members may have a better idea of what the economy will do.

One bill to be considered early in the session is a measure by Rep. Duane Bridges, R-Valley, that would increase incentives for companies that hire veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Bridges said his bill would offer a $2,000 tax credit to employers who hire an unemployed veteran.

“A lot of guys are coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan and looking for jobs and we want to help the veterans out so they won’t be out on the streets,” said Bridges, a former Marine. He said he expects the bill to be considered at the start of the session.

Hubbard said one priority of the session for Republican leadership will be to pass a bill authorizing charter schools in Alabama. Charter schools are public schools that are free from much of the bureaucracy and regulations of traditional public schools.

He said he recently took a group of legislators to Memphis, Tenn., and was impressed with how well charter schools work and allow for innovation.

House Minority Leader Rep. Craig Ford, D-Gadsden, said Democrats also want to see new jobs created in Alabama, but believe the best solution to the state’s financial problems is eliminating tax loopholes for large corporations. He said Democrats plan to meet soon to decide which bills will be a priority in the upcoming session. He said he’s heard Republicans talk about creating jobs before.

“That was their priority last session,” Ford said.

View the original article here: http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/article/20120112/NEWS/120119937?p=2&tc=pg

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Charter schools will be priority for Alabama lawmakers, House Speaker Mike Hubbard says

By: Marie Leech, The Birmingham News

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — Allowing charter schools in Alabama — one of just nine states that doesn’t allow them — will be a priority in the upcoming legislative session, Rep. Mike Hubbard, R-Auburn, told the Birmingham Rotary Club Wednesday afternoon.

“The status quo is not an option,” said Hubbard, who is speaker of the House of Representatives. “(The system) isn’t working, and we need some changes.”

Charter schools are public schools that exist through a contract with either a state agency or local school board. Charter schools are free from much of the bureaucracy and regulations traditional public schools must follow, but must achieve stringent goals set out by the charter, including improving student achievement.

“We must do something to fix Alabama’s drop out rate, which is up to 40 percent in some schools,” he said. “I am an advocate of school choice.”

Hubbard said a recent trip to visit charter schools in Memphis, was encouraging.

“Memphis is very similar to Birmingham and their scores increased at the charter schools,” he said. “It is not a panacea. It’s not a cure-all for all of our ills. But it will provide an option … We should not force parents, our taxpayers, to send their kids to schools that are failing.”

Other priorities during the upcoming session, which begins Feb. 7, include job creation and running a more efficient government.

Job creation, he said, occurs in the private sector, not government. But the government can make things easier, he said.

A few upcoming bills will help that, he said, including a bill to streamline tax incentives to recruit and retain jobs, a bill that would offer tax incentives to companies that hire active members of the military, and a bill that would require an exhaustive study before any additional regulations on businesses could be imposed.

“Like I said, the government does have its role, but it should be there to help businesses prosper, not to hinder growth,” Hubbard said.

Alabama’s immigration law also will be a topic of discussion in the upcoming session, he said.

Hubbard promised the law will not be repealed. Instead, he said, it will make it more business friendly. The law also may be changed to allow more temporary work visas to be issued for agricultural workers, he said.

“We are committed to fixing it to make it even better,” he said.

The final priority includes right-sizing the government, he said.

“We are looking at every area of government and looking at duplication,” he said. “Believe it or not, we have some duplication, and we want to make sure we have the right size state government.”

(Source: al.com, Marie Leech- The Birmingham News, http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/01/charter_schools_will_be_priori.html)

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Speaker Hubbard Congratulates Drake on Election to Alabama House District 45

MONTGOMERY – House Speaker Mike Hubbard today congratulated Dickie Drake on his election to the Alabama House of Representatives in District 45. Drake will succeed his late brother, Owen, who died on June 27 after representing the district since 2006.

“Dickie is a strong conservative who will represent the values of his district in the Alabama Legislature,” Speaker Hubbard said. “We all miss Owen dearly, and I know he’d be proud to see his brother continue his legacy of leadership in the Legislature.”

Speaker Hubbard said he looks forward to working with Dickie Drake on job-growth proposals in the upcoming Regular Session of the Legislature, which begins February 7, 2012.

“Our top priority is boosting private sector job growth and getting Alabamians back to work. We have a strong slate of proposals to accomplish that, most of which I believe Republicans and Democrats can agree on and work together to pass. I know Dickie understands this, and I’m glad to have him as part of our team.”

 

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Majority Leader: Immigration Law Helping Alabamians Find Jobs

MONTGOMERY – The dramatic decline in Alabama’s unemployment rate shows that the state’s strict immigration law is helping more Alabamians find jobs, House Majority Leader Rep. Micky Hammon (R-Decatur) said today.

Gov. Robert Bentley announced Friday that Alabama’s unemployment rate for October was 9.3 percent, down from 9.8 percent in September. In Marshall County, a known hotbed for illegal immigrant labor, unemployment was at 8.1 percent for October, down from 8.8 percent in September and 10 percent in June, when Alabama’s crackdown on illegal immigration was signed into law.

“We’ve heard anecdotal evidence from all corners of the state about how more Alabama citizens are being hired in jobs formerly held by illegal immigrants, but the statewide and county-specific data released today is probably the best statistical proof we’ve seen to indicate this is happening,” Rep. Hammon said. “There are many factors that come into play for employment numbers. However, take Marshall County, where the illegal immigrant problem has probably been more pronounced than anywhere in the state. When Marshall County’s unemployment rate drops almost a full two percent since the law was signed, it’s difficult to deny the law is having a positive effect on employment.”

Other counties where illegal immigration has been a problem saw precipitous drops in unemployment as well, including Morgan County, where the rate declined a full 1.1 percent from September to October.

Though opponents of Alabama’s immigration law have done all they can to discredit its economic benefits, the numbers tell a different story, Rep. Hammon said.

“Despite how desperately illegal immigrant sympathizers have tried to portray this law as somehow harmful to our state’s economy, the truth is more Alabamians are working today thanks in part to our decision to crackdown on illegal immigration,” he said. “The evidence is clear: this law is helping put more Alabamians back to work, and that’s why such a strong majority of Alabamians support it.”

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