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Tom Davis
Troy Office of University Relations
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tomdavis@troy.edu
Office of University Relations
253 Adams Administration
Troy, AL 36082
(334) 670-3196
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| Timing
is right for constitutional reform, speaker tells TSU audience |
Advocates
of reforming the Alabama Constitution may have a window of opportunity
during this 2002 election year, a speaker told about 40 students,
faculty and staff at Troy State University’s Hawkins-Adams-Long
Hall of Honor Tuesday.
Dr. Gerald W. Johnson, director of Capital Survey Research
Center in Montgomery and a presenter with Alabama Citizens for Constitutional
Reform (ACCR), was the keynote speaker at a seminar sponsored by the Troy State
University Faculty Advisory Council, the TSU Chapter of the Higher Education
Partnership and the ACCR.
"At this point, we’re the closest (to constitutional
reform) that we’ve been in a long time," Dr. Johnson said.
Dr. Johnson presented an overview of the history of Alabama’s
six constitutions, pointing out that at least six governors have proposed rewriting
the 1901 Constitution that is currently used today. He said Alabama’s Constitution
is too cumbersome and restricts local self-governance, also known as home rule.
"About 40 percent of the bills considered by the Alabama Legislature
have only local impact," Dr. Johnson said.
He said Alabama’s Constitution has grown past the stage
of being a general statement of rights of government to being a statute book
swollen to 10 times the size of the U.S. Constitution. The Alabama Constitution
is 315,000 words, while other states’ constitutions average 26,000 words.
But it’s not the size that matters, it’s what the
constitution does—or fails to do, Johnson said.
"A Constitution should outline basic rules," he said. "It should
not be a broad-based document. Alabama’s Constitution fails to provide
the basic rules of the game."
Dr. Johnson said the groundswell of support created by ACCR
and other reform-minded groups creates the political climate to change the constitution,
pointing out that three major gubernatorial candidates have endorsed reform.
In the final analysis, Dr. Johnson said, the actions of six
major advocacy groups may decide reform: the Alabama Farmers Federation, the
Business Council of Alabama, Alabama Chapter of AFL-CIO, the Alabama Trial Lawyers
Association and the Alabama Education Association.
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