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Three Big Things

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  • ALDOT parts ways with team that had been picked to build new Bayway

    MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) - The Alabama Department of Transportation is parting ways with a construction team that had been selected to replace the Interstate 10 Bayway.

    Mobile Bayway Constructors had been selected to design and build a new span over Mobile Bay that is both wider and higher than the current structure. It is one half of a mammoth project that includes the construction of a six-lane bridge over the Mobile River.

    ALDOT characterized the split as mutual.

    “ALDOT is building the Mobile River Bridge through a design-build process,” ALDOT chief engineer Ed Austin said in a prepared statement. “This process has served us well and allows us the flexibility needed to make key decisions related to project development. This is another step in our effort to ensure the project can be completed in a timely, safe and cost-effective manner.”

    ALDOT spokesman Tony Harris told FOX10 News Monday’s announcement will not prevent the project from moving forward.

    “The bridge is full steam ahead,” he said.

    ALDOT said in the statement that it move to the next best qualified bidder. The agency did not name that team, but public documents identify that team as Kiewit Massman Traylor, a group headed by a New Orleans company called Kiewit Construction. That is the same team that has been picked to build the bridge.

    ALDOT said it expects to release additional information on the process in the coming weeks, coinciding with the March 31 expiration of the agency’s current Early Works Design Agreement with the Mobile Bayway Constructors team.

    The state has estimated the entire project to cost between $3.2 billion and $3.5 billion. But the exact price tag will not be known until the contractors and ALDOT lock down a “guaranteed maximum price. State officials said they also are finalizing their application for low-interest federal loans under the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act. ALDOT officials said they remain confident that a groundbreaking can take place before the end of the year.


    READ MORE HERE: Alabama House passes bill that would notify parents of child's traffic ticket | WKRG.com

  • Hegseth says ‘nobody was texting war plans’ after group chat breach

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters Monday that “nobody was texting war plans” following news breaking that Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, gained access to a group chat featuring Trump administration officials talking about plans for an attack against Houthi rebels in Yemen.

    “Nobody was texting war plans, and that’s all I have to say about that,” Hegseth said outside a plane in Hawaii after being asked about Goldberg’s access to the chat.

    Hegseth also called Goldberg “a deceitful and highly discredited, so-called journalist who’s made a profession of peddling hoaxes time and time again.”

    The Hill has reached out to The Atlantic for comment.

    Goldberg was reportedly included in a Trump administration group chat on Signal in which top officials debated and then discussed details of attacks against Houthi rebels.

    The initial invite to the group apparently came from national security adviser Mike Waltz. Hegseth reportedly sent the group details including weapons used, targets, and timing — two hours ahead of the attacks, which began on March 15.

    Others in the group were Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.

    In the stunning report, Goldberg claimed Waltz connected with him on Signal on March 11 and, two days later, he was invited to join a chain called the “Houthi PC small group,” in which they discussed strikes against the Houthi militant group in Yemen — seemingly unaware of the journalist’s presence in the group.

    He wrote that he initially had strong doubts the text group was real, “because I could not believe that the national-security leadership of the United States would communicate on Signal about imminent war plans.”

    Goldberg also said he “could not believe that the national security adviser to the president would be so reckless as to include him in the discussions with senior U.S. officials.”

    He said he realized the text chain could be real after the person who was supposedly Hegseth messaged to the group that the first detonations in Yemen would be felt in two hours, at 1:45 p.m., which was in line with what took place. 

    Hegseth later said that the surprise strikes, which hit multiple targets across three days, were part of an “unrelenting” campaign until the Iran-backed group stops attacking vessels in the Red Sea, a vital maritime corridor. 

    Brian Hughes, the spokesperson for the National Security Council, confirmed the message chain was authentic.

    “This appears to be an authentic message chain, and we are reviewing how an inadvertent number was added to the chain,” wrote Hughes. “The thread is a demonstration of the deep and thoughtful policy coordination between senior officials. The ongoing success of the Houthi operation demonstrates that there were no threats to troops or national security.”

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) is calling for Congress to investigate top Trump administration officials in the wake of the bombshell revelation

    Jeffries said the details of the breach reveal a “reckless” administration — one stocked with an “unqualified” Cabinet — that poses a threat to national security in the name of defending it.

    Congress, he said, has a role in getting to the bottom of the incident. 

    “There should absolutely be a congressional investigation so that we can understand what happened, why did it happen, and how do we prevent this type of national security breach from ever happening again,” Jeffries told reporters Monday in the Capitol, shortly after The Atlantic piece was published.

    “This is reckless, irresponsible and dangerous.”

    Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) slammed the top officials, calling them incompetent and warning that if the plan details were revealed Americans could have died.

    “There is no world in which this information should have been shared in non-secure channels,” he said online. “Hegseth is in so far over his head that he is a danger to this country and our men and women in uniform.”

    Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Monday, however, dismissed any potential disciplinary action for Waltz and Hegseth after news broke of The Atlantic report.

    Asked by The Hill if Waltz should be disciplined, Johnson responded, “No, no, of course not.”

    “The administration, as I understand, I just was with the president in the Oval Office, just now, the administration is addressing what happened,” Johnson said when asked if he was concerned about the report. “Apparently an inadvertent phone number made it onto that thread. They’re gonna track that down and make sure that doesn’t happen again.”



    READ MORE HERE: Pete Hegseth says 'nobody was texting war plans' after group chat breach | NewsNation

  • State boasts $7 billion in investments, 8,500 jobs in 2024 — ‘Companies around the world see Alabama as the place to invest’

    On Monday, Gov. Kay Ivey announced the release of the 2024 New & Expanding Industry Announcements Report, which boasts $7 billion in new capital investments across 224 projects and generates more than 8,500 jobs.

    "Alabama's economy is on the move, and this report proves it," Ivey said. "With more than $7 billion in new investments and thousands of jobs created, we are building a future filled with opportunity. Companies around the world see Alabama as the place to invest, grow and succeed — and we're just getting started."

    Commerce Secretary Ellen McNair said targeted strategies and economic growth plans from the state are fueling the state's economic momentum.

    "These programs are not only bringing investment and jobs but also strengthening our communities and positioning Alabama as a leader in global industry," McNair said.

    The 2024 report highlights expansion across multiple sectors, such as manufacturing, aerospace, technology and logistics.

    Last year's high-impact projects include $1.6 billion from Novelis in Baldwin County, a planned $800 million data center by Meta Platforms in Montgomery and a $330 million Coca-Cola investment for a new headquarters in Birmingham.

    Ivey also drew attention to the state's rural economic growth. The report shows that Alabama's rural counties attracted $1.2 billion in investments in 2024, creating nearly 1,700 new jobs. Namely, last year, Republic Airways' LIFT Academy established a flight training center in Macon County. LIFT is creating 35 jobs and bringing 57 flight instructors to train the next generation of aviators in Tuskegee.

    "We are making sure economic prosperity reaches every corner of our state," Ivey continued. "From advanced manufacturing to aviation training and auto parts production, rural Alabama is on the rise. These investment projects are transforming communities and creating lasting opportunities."


    READ THE REST OF THE STORY: State boasts $7 billion in investments, 8,500 jobs in 2024 — ‘Companies around the world see Alabama as the place to invest’

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