Alabama Passes Law Enforcement Scholarship Bill

By Rick McCann
Blue RAM Media/Gulf Coast News
April 9, 2026
MONTGOMERY, Ala. Legislators working close to the end of their current session were able to agree on and pass a piece of legislation that would benefit our law enforcement personnel statewide.
This week the Alabama Legislature gave a final passage to HB98, the Alabama Law Enforcement Officers’ Family Scholarship Act, which provides up to $2,500 in tuition assistance per academic period to the spouses and children of long-serving law enforcement officers.
The bill, sponsored by State Rep. Allen Treadaway (R-Morris), was originally part of Governor Kay Ivey and House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter’s Safe Alabama Package in 2025. It is intended to help retain experienced officers at a time when law enforcement agencies across the country are struggling with staffing shortages.
Nationwide, police officers, some longtime employees of their agencies have been jumping ship and going to other law enforcement agencies that pay better, offer better benefits and have a better acceptance in their communities.
In this session and the previous one, several pro law enforcement bills have been passed and were part of Gov. Ivey’s top agenda.
Under this bill, scholarship funds may be used for an undergraduate course of study at any public or private technical school, college, or university in Alabama. The Alabama Commission on Higher Education will administer the program and is required to report annually to the Legislature on its progress.
The bill also establishes the Alabama Law Enforcement Officers’ Family Scholarship Fund and authorizes the Department of Revenue to create a blackout license plate, with proceeds directed to the fund.
Existing law already provides financial assistance to children and spouses of law enforcement officers killed or totally disabled in the line of duty. HB98 expands that support to the families of long-term city, county, and state law enforcement officers still actively serving.
“Our law enforcement put it all on the line every day they go to work, and so do their families,” Ivey said. “I am proud we will support long-serving law enforcement families through dependent scholarships. I look forward to signing HB98 into law, and I thank Speaker Ledbetter for making this a priority.”
Ledbetter called the legislation a long overdue recognition of law enforcement families.
“The passage of HB98 is a long overdue show of thanks for Alabama’s law enforcement officers and the families supporting them as they work to protect and serve this great state,” Ledbetter said. “Over the course of the last two sessions, the men and women of the House have led the charge in delivering additional resources and support to law enforcement in an effort to bolster public safety. It is one thing to say your state is pro-law enforcement, but it is another to put action behind those words. Today, Alabama did exactly that.”
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