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SB6 • 2026

Alabama Memorial Preservation Act of 2017, memorial marker required, penalties revised

Alabama Memorial Preservation Act of 2017, memorial marker required, penalties revised

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Allen (G)
Last action
2026-01-13
Official status
Pending Committee Action in House of Origin
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary and digest do not provide detailed information about specific penalties or enforcement mechanisms beyond what is mentioned in the bill text.

Alabama Memorial Preservation Act

This bill updates the Alabama Memorial Preservation Act of 2017 to require that when a memorial building is replaced or removed, its original name must be kept or marked. It also sets stricter rules for getting permission to change these memorials and increases penalties for breaking the law.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires any government entity replacing a memorial building to keep the original name or put up a marker with the old name.
  • Changes how long an application for changing a memorial must be reviewed by the Committee on Alabama Monument Protection, now it is automatically denied if not acted upon within 90 days.
  • Increases penalties for violating the act from $5,000 to $25,000 per day until full restoration is completed.
  • Gives the Attorney General the power to sue anyone who violates the law and does not take steps to fix it.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Government entities that control public property with memorial buildings or streets.
  • The Committee on Alabama Monument Protection, which reviews requests for changing memorials.
  • People who want to change names of memorial buildings or streets without permission.

Terms To Know

Memorial building
A building that honors a person or event and is located on public property.
Committee on Alabama Monument Protection
The group responsible for reviewing requests to change memorial buildings, streets, or monuments.

Limits and Unknowns

  • It does not specify what happens if a replacement building is not possible.
  • Does not clarify the exact process for erecting markers when a building cannot be replaced.

Bill History

  1. 2026-01-13 Senate

    Pending Committee Action in House of Origin

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    Read for the first time and referred to the Senate Committee on County and Municipal Government

Official Summary Text

Alabama Memorial Preservation Act of 2017, memorial marker required, penalties revised

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SB6 INTRODUCED
Page 0
SB6
JPCWEFF-1
By Senator Allen
RFD: County and Municipal Government
First Read: 13-Jan-26
PFD: 17-Jun-25
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JPCWEFF-1 05/15/2025 KMS (L)cr 2025-1968
Page 1
PFD: 17-Jun-25
SYNOPSIS:
Under existing law, the Alabama Memorial
Preservation Act of 2017 prohibits architecturally
significant buildings, memorial buildings, memorial
streets, and monuments that are located on public
property, and have been so situated for 40 or more
years, from being relocated, removed, altered, renamed,
or otherwise disturbed unless the Committee on Alabama
Monument Protection grants a waiver and provides
penalties for violations.
This bill would require a controlling
governmental entity that replaces a memorial building
to maintain the original name or erect a marker
memorializing the name.
This bill would provide that a petition for
waiver is deemed denied if the Committee on Alabama
Monument Protection fails to act on an application for
waiver within 90 days.
This bill would also revise the penalties for
violations and would authorize the Attorney General to
commence a civil action.
A BILL
TO BE ENTITLED
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SB6 INTRODUCED
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TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
To amend Sections 41-9-233 and 41-9-235, Code of
Alabama 1975, relating to the Alabama Memorial Preservation
Act of 2017; to require a controlling governmental entity that
replaces a memorial building to maintain the original name or
erect a marker memorializing the name; to provide that a
petition for waiver is deemed denied if the Committee on
Alabama Monument Protection fails to act on an application for
waiver within 90 days; to revise penalties for violations; and
to authorize the Attorney General to commence a civil action
under certain circumstances.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA:
Section 1. Sections 41-9-233 and 41-9-235 of the Code
of Alabama 1975, are amended to read as follows:
"§41-9-233
(a) No person may prevent the governmental entity
having responsibility for maintaining any architecturally
significant building, memorial building, memorial school,
memorial street, or monument from taking proper and
appropriate measures, and exercising proper and appropriate
means, for the protection, preservation, care, repair, or
restoration of those monuments, streets, or buildings.
(b) If any architecturally significant building or
memorial building is razed, the governmental entity
responsible for the building shall ensure that any replacement
building or resulting park or green space maintains the name
of the original building. If the building is not replaced, the
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SB6 INTRODUCED
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of the original building. If the building is not replaced, the
governmental entity shall erect a marker to memorialize the
person or event for which the memorial building was originally
named. "
"§41-9-235
(a)(1) Any entity exercising control of public property
on which an architecturally significant building, memorial
building, memorial school, memorial street, or monument is
located may petition the committee for a waiver from
subsection (b) or subsection (c) of Section 41-9-232 (b) or
(c) through an application including, at a minimum, all of the
following:
a. A resolution by the controlling entity seeking a
waiver for the renaming of a memorial school or for the
relocation, removal, alteration, renaming, or other
disturbance of the architecturally significant building,
memorial building, memorial street, or monument and the
reasons therefor.
b. Written documentation of the origin of the
architecturally significant building, memorial building,
memorial school, memorial street, or monument, the intent of
the sponsoring entity at the time of dedication, and any
subsequent alteration, renaming, or other disturbance of the
architecturally significant building, memorial building,
memorial street, or monument.
c. Written commentary from any heritage, historical,
genealogical, or preservation organizations with interest in
the decision of the controlling entity, and from the general
public.
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SB6 INTRODUCED
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public.
d. A written statement of any facts that were not known
at the time of the origin of the architecturally significant
building, memorial building, memorial school, memorial street,
or monument, but are known now, that the committee should
consider in granting the waiver. The absence of such facts
should serve as a presumption against the granting of a waiver
by the committee.
(2)a. If the committee grants a waiver, the committee
may provide reasonable conditions and instructions to ensure
that the architecturally significant building, memorial
building, memorial school, memorial street, or monument is
restored or preserved to the greatest extent possible.
b.(b) In the event there is a need for emergency
repairs or construction at the site of or to the
architecturally significant building, memorial building,
memorial street, or monument or on adjacent property, the
controlling entity may temporarily relocate or otherwise
protect the architecturally significant building, memorial
building, memorial street, or monument without seeking a
waiver under the process provided in this section; provided ,
the architecturally significant building, memorial building,
memorial street, or monument shall be returned to its prior
location or condition, or both, as soon as safely and
reasonably possible, and no later than one year after the
completion of the repair or construction. If the repair or
construction is expected to take more than one year, the
controlling entity shall seek a waiver under the process
specified in this section.
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SB6 INTRODUCED
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specified in this section.
c.(c) If the committee fails to act on a completed
application for a waiver within 90 days after the application
is submitted to the committee, the waiver shall be deemed
granted denied .
d.(d) If the Attorney General determines that an entity
exercising control of public property has renamed a memorial
school or has relocated, removed, altered, renamed, or
otherwise disturbed an architecturally significant building,
memorial building, memorial street, or monument from that
public property without first obtaining a waiver from the
committee as required by this article, or failed to comply
with the conditions and instructions issued by the committee
upon the grant of a waiver pursuant to this section, the
entity shall be fined twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000)
five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each day that the violation
continues and until the entity has taken full restorative
action to comply with the requirements of this article. The
Attorney General may also commence a civil action to enjoin a
threatened or continuing violation of this article. Upon
written request of the entity and the submission of supporting
documentation that restoration has begun, the Attorney General
may stay the fine pending complete restoration . The fine shall
be collected by the Attorney General, forwarded by his or her
office to the State Treasurer, and deposited into the Alabama
State Historic Preservation Fund created in Section 41-9-255.
e.(e) Judicial review of the final decision of the
committee may be sought pursuant to the Alabama Administrative
Procedure Act, Chapter 22 of this title ."
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Procedure Act, Chapter 22 of this title ."
Section 2. This act shall become effective on October
1, 2026.
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