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HR211 Alabama 2010 Session

Updated Feb 27, 2026
Notable

Summary

Session
Regular Session 2010
Title
House of Representatives, Special Order Calendar
Summary

This House resolution sets five bills as the special and paramount order of business for the 8th legislative day, giving them priority over all other business.

What This Bill Does

Upon adoption, it designates HB345, HB37, HB109, HB236, and HB146 as the special orders for the 8th day, ahead of regular business. It lists the topics of each bill so members know what will be considered first: economic development and military base lease areas (HB345), teacher certification and discipline (HB37), tax incentive rules for economic development (HB109), offenses in the line of duty (HB236), and county expense claims and adjustments (HB146).

Who It Affects
  • Members of the Alabama House of Representatives and legislative staff, who will address these bills as the priority items on the 8th day.
  • Public and stakeholders interested in the topics of these bills (economic development incentives, education employee discipline, law enforcement and public safety, and county expense claims), who may be affected if these bills are enacted.
Key Provisions
  • HB345 would amend the Enhanced Use Lease Area Act to broaden tax increment financing for development around blighted areas and enhanced use lease areas on military base lands, adding or amending sections 40-9E-1, 40-9E-2, 11-99-1, 11-99-2, 11-99-4, 11-99-5, 11-99-6, 11-99-10 and 40-18-70.
  • HB37 would require revocation of teaching certificates or termination of employment for educators convicted of a felony or a sex offense involving a child, adding provisions to the Teacher Tenure Law, Teacher Accountability Act, and Fair Dismissal Act (sections 16-24-8.1, 16-24B-3.1, 36-26-102.1).
  • HB109 would modify economic development tax incentives by changing base wage requirements and delaying the effective date of new requirements for applications filed by November 21, 2009 (Act 2009-722).
  • HB236 would address offenses committed in the line of duty by public education employees and law enforcement officers, including arrest warrants and arrest procedures.
  • HB146 would change how county expense claims denied by state agencies are handled, requiring the State Board of Adjustment to approve such claims unless they are denied under procedures adopted under the Administrative Procedure Act (amending Sec. 41-9-65).
AI-generated summary using openai/gpt-5-nano on Feb 25, 2026. May contain errors — refer to the official bill text for accuracy.
Subjects
Resolution, Legislative

Bill Actions

Guin motion to Adopt adopted Voice Vote

Introduced

Bill Text

Documents

Source: Alabama Legislature