Alabama Senate OKs program for high school dropouts to earn diplomas
Rep. Matt Woods, R-Jasper, stands in the Alabama House of Representatives on May 8, 2024 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector)
The Alabama Senate passed a bill Tuesday to create a program allowing high school dropouts to get their diplomas through the Adult Education Division of the Alabama Community College System.
HB 266, sponsored by Rep. Matt Woods, R-Jasper, would be known as the Restoring Educational Advancement of Completing High School (REACH) Act.
A 17-year-old student can leave high school early if their parents agree and after an exit meeting. The exit interview informs the parent or guardian about the potential negative impacts of dropping out, such as lower future earnings and a higher chance of unemployment, and the student is provided with information on the 'detrimental impacts and effects of early withdrawal.'
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
The REACH Act would require students to be provided with information during the exit interview on options available after dropping out, and require local education boards to report to the Alabama State Department of Education on student withdrawal rates.
The bill passed with no discussion on a 34-0 vote and goes to Gov. Kay Ivey.
The Alabama Community College System endorsed the bill at its March meeting. Boone Kinard, executive director of external affairs, said then that more students would be able to take advantage of the system's adult education program, and the 'State Department of Education to get better data.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


E&E News
7 hours ago
- E&E News
Republicans cast doubt on ‘REINS Act' megabill eligibility
As one senator pushes to include a massive overhaul of federal regulations in Republicans' party-line megabill, other GOP members have cast doubt on whether it is procedurally eligible. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) has spent this week heavily lobbying for deregulatory language based on the 'Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act' to be included in the Republicans' tax, energy and security budget reconciliation package. The legislation would give Congress final approval over any 'major rule that increases revenue' and expand mechanisms for undoing existing rules. It would upend federal agencies' rulemaking powers. Advertisement But Republican senators are skeptical of whether such language is eligible for a reconciliation package. The Senate's 'Byrd rule' means that everything within the package must be related to the budget in order for the bill to pass by a simple majority.
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
White House backs major legislation to speed up deportations
EXCLUSIVE: The White House is backing legislation to expedite the timeline for executing removal orders for illegal immigrants. The Rapid Expulsion of Migrant Offenders who Violate and Evade (REMOVE) Act, led by senators Marsha Blackburn, Ted Budd and Ted Cruz would give the Department of Justice a quick 15-day timeframe to finish "removal proceedings" after the process has "commenced." "Under Joe Biden's failed leadership, we saw the largest wave of illegal immigration in our nation's history, forcing communities across Tennessee and America to bear the consequences," Blackburn said in a statement Thursday, when the bill was introduced. "With a record number of illegal aliens now living in the United States, President Trump must have every tool necessary to remove them quickly from our country. Our REMOVE Act would require these illegal aliens to begin removal proceedings within 15 days of a Notice to Appear being served," she added. Ice Touts Record-breaking Immigration Enforcement During Trump's First 100 Days Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff for policy, said the bill will help with the administration's deportation goals, adding the administration is aiming for 3,000 arrests daily. Immigration and Customs Enforcement broke single-day arrest records Tuesday and Wednesday with well over 2,000 arrests. Read On The Fox News App "Under the Biden Administration, the American people witnessed a full-scale invasion of our country that directly threatened our national security and sovereignty. With untold millions of illegal aliens in the U.S. due to Democrats' open-border policies, we must take strong, decisive measures to remove those who have been ordered to be removed from the United States," Miller, who's also a Homeland Security advisor for the White House, said in a statement. Vice President Vance Vows Trump Admin Will 'Use Everything' It Can To Increase Number Of Criminal Deportations "The REMOVE Act is critical legislation that will help us fulfill our mass deportation operation and get gang members, cartels, and violent criminals off the streets. Passing this legislation, in conjunction with the largest mass deportation investment in American history provided by our One Big Beautiful Bill, will ensure we permanently secure the border. Thank you to Senator Blackburn for her leadership." Millions of people were estimated to have entered the country illegally during the Biden administration, including through the southern border. 'Prompt Removal': Trump Dhs Expands Expedited Deportation Powers As Operations Ramp Up Federal authorities have stressed removing those with criminal convictions and ties to gangs like MS-13 and Tren de Aragua, which the administration designated as foreign terrorist organizations. Others have been encouraged to self-deport before facing a potential arrest, and the federal government will pay for their exit flight and provide $1,000 after their exit from the United States is confirmed. Click Here For More Immigration Coverage During Trump's first 100 days in office, over 65,000 illegal immigrants were removed from the country, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. "Now, President Trump is stepping in to restore order. I'm proud to stand with Senator Blackburn and my colleagues to fast-track the removal of those who have been ordered to be removed. It's time we uphold the integrity of our immigration system to protect our nation," Budd stated. A Pew Research Center poll from March indicated the majority of American adults back deportations of illegal immigrants to at least some extent, including 32% who back the removals of all of them, regardless of whether another crime was article source: White House backs major legislation to speed up deportations
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Democrats can barely contain their glee over Trump and Musk's ‘big beautiful breakup'
Just in time for German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's visit to Washington, Democrats enjoyed a healthy helping of schadenfreude as President Donald Trump and Elon Musk's feud went nuclear in real time. 'The big beautiful breakup?' Rep. Sarah McBride asked in response to a question from The Independent Thursday about Trump and Musk's spat, a reference to the 'One Big, Beautiful Bill,' Trump's centerpiece legislation that seeks to extend the 2017 tax cuts, slash social spending and ramp up immigration spending. The first inklings of a crack in the partnership that started when the Tesla CEO bankrolled Trump's return to the White House and blossomed as he took on the DOGE role of slashing government spending, came on Tuesday, when Musk called Trump's bill an 'outrageous, pork-filled, disgusting abomination.' 'You ever see that meme of the guy's face, like, when the person, the worst person in the world, you actually agreed with?' Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona said to The Independent, in reference to a popular Clickhole article headlined 'Heartbreaking: The Worst Person You Know Just Made A Great Point.' 'That's kind of what I feel right now,' Gallego said. Sen Raphael Warnock of Georgia could not help but laugh. 'It is proof positive that even a broken clock is right twice a day,' Warnock said. Musk's words plunged Senate Republicans into chaos as they seek to pass the 'One Big, Beautiful Bill' Act after the House passed their version last month. But on Thursday, Musk went scorched earth, tweeting that Trump 'is in the Epstein files,' and saying that is why they had not been released. 'That is the real reason they have not been made public,' the Tesla billionaire tweeted. 'Have a nice day, DJT!' Musk turned up the heat even higher when he endorsed Trump's impeachment. Rep. Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, who led the second Trump impeachment, said he had missed Musk's tweet calling for Trump to be impeached. 'Well, he must know a lot more information,' about Trump's ties to Epstein, Raskin told The Independent. Democrats have spent the early months of the Trump administration depicting Musk as a shadow president who spent $290 million to elect Trump and whose Department of Government Efficiency slashed vital services. For a while, it seemed like Trump and Musk would be a perfect match, with Musk dubbing himself 'First Buddy,' wearing his 'Dark Ultra MAGA' hat and carting his son X around the Oval Office. But some Democrats said that the fallout was inevitable. 'It was always going to happen,' Rep. Maxwell Frost of Florida told The Independent. 'I didn't expect it to happen at the same time like it is now.' Musk became a villain in Democratic attacks in the Supreme Court race in Wisconsin, given that Musk's political action committees poured in millions. Shortly thereafter, Musk said he would refrain from giving money. But Musk did little to dispel the idea that he played a role in winning Trump the presidency on X. 'Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate,' Musk said. 'Such ingratitude.' Rep. Eric Swalwell of California, an outspoken critic of Trump, agreed with Musk. 'If Elon didn't help Donald Trump, he wouldn't be he wouldn't be president, he'd be in prison,' Swalwell, told The Independent. Progressives said that the fight between a president who largely ran on the premise that he was an incredibly wealthy businessman versus the world's richest man showed the dangers of wealth concentration. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the democratic socialist from New York, said that the fight validated the message she and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont had spread across the country in their 'Fighting Oligarchy' tour. 'I don't think that the whole state of the country should be with two should be concentrated in two guys with massive egos that are fighting with each other,' the progressive firebrand Ocasio-Cortez told The Independent. When asked if she enjoyed the feud, AOC said, 'I mean, it was a long time coming.' Trump has sniped back in kind, saying, 'Elon was 'wearing thin,' I asked him to leave,' further saying: 'I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!' For other Democrats, the fallout shows that Musk and Trump deserve each other. 'They both got what they paid for,' Rep. Melanie Stansbury of New Mexico, the top Democrat on the DOGE subcommittee to House Oversight, told The Independent. But Musk's impact on the Trump administration will last longer than the feud. As Stansbury descended the steps, she clutched a folder with the DOGE logo.