Alabama
Edmund Pettus Bridge, Selma AL
From the 50 State Visitor Guide :
Code of Alabama 2019
§13A-11-204, §§15-20A-1 through
15-20A-48
Ala. Admin Code. 760-X-1-.21
AWA Compliant
Registration Triggers and Deadlines:
Initial registration
and updates to registration info must be done “immediately,” defined as 3 days.
§§15-20A-10, 15-20A-14.
“Reside” means “to be
habitually or systematically present at a place,” and includes 4 or more
hours at a place per day for a duration of:
(a) 3 or more consecutive days,
or
(b) 10 or more days in a
calendar month.
Because 4 or more hours at a
place constitutes a day, overnights are not required to establish a
residence. §15-20A-4(20).
Residency/Presence and Other Restrictions:
Residence
restriction: 2,000 ft. of
school, child care facility, resident camp facility, victim or victim’s
immediate family; exceptions apply. §15-20A-11. Additional
restrictions apply to residence with any minor.
Employment restriction: 2,000 ft. of school or childcare facility;
500 ft. of playground, park, athletic field or facility, or child-focused
business or facility. §15-20A-13.
Presence restriction: For conviction
involving minor, “loitering” 500 ft. of school, child care facility,
playground, park, athletic field or facility, school bus stop, college or
university, or any child-focused business; registrant must be asked to leave by
an “authorized person.” §15-20A-17.
Travel regulations: Registrants in AL
must notify law enforcement whenever traveling for 3 or more consecutive days;
travel without this notification will be deemed a change of residence. §15-20A-15.
Relief from certain residency
and employment restrictions is available.
Per Rolfe Survey, visiting registrants once placed on state’s registry ARE NOT REMOVED.
Duration & updates:
Life. Homeless registrants report once every 7
calendar days. §15-20A-12.
All others
quarterly. §15-20A-10.
Most recent visit: March and April 2022
Alabama has become notorious for having among the harshest and most inhumane registry laws in the U.S., but for visitors this state is not quite the worst. Those distinctions belong to Illinois (third day aggregate per calendar year triggers registration, and it’s lifetime for out-of-state offenders) and of course my home state of Florida (third day aggregate per calendar year triggers registration, lifetime for all offenders including out-of-state, and you will never be removed when you return to your home state).
Instead, in Alabama the third consecutive day triggers registration (including partial days), or ten or more days per calendar month. Furthermore, “Reside” is defined by statute to mean “to be habitually or systematically present at a place,” and includes 4 or more hours at a place per day. Therefore overnights are not required to establish a residence. §15-20A-4(20).
This over-definition of the word “reside” could mean, in theory, that if you arrive at your Alabama destination after 8:01 PM one evening that day would not count, you could stay there for the next two calendar days, then make sure to skedaddle by 3:59 AM the following morning and you’d be okay. That remains just a theory, however, and I have no intention of ever testing it.
Alabama also has a long list of residency, presence and employment restrictions and yes they will all apply to you as a visitor even before you are required to register. So be careful. Very careful.
As part of my 2022 Deep South Tour I passed through Alabama not once but twice. But I did so in two separate calendar months, which meant I could count my consecutive days and days per month separately on each pass. Because the third consecutive day would trigger registration I made sure to be in state no more than two days each way.
The only other option to lengthen my stay in Alabama without triggering registration would have been to leave the state not just for one night but two consecutive nights and then return for two days. Why? Because if I were to leave the state for just one night and then return, that first partial day back of four hours or more would automatically become the third consecutive day, and I didn’t want that!
Early one morning in late March I entered the state from Florida. Traveling up US 231 I intended to stop at the Alabama Pioneer Museum in Troy, but OOPS, that was on a Tuesday and it’s only open Thursday-Saturday. Oh well, I continued on to Montgomery where I visited the Rosa Parks Museum and the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. Yikes! Who knew that church is within site of the Alabama state capital building?! Must’ve been a scary place to organize a bus boycott!
From Montgomery I travelled the Montgomery March Highway to Selma, walked across the Edmund Pettus Bridge which links the Selma Interpretive Center (which was open) with the National Voting Rights Museum (which was closed). After a fabulous barbeque dinner I bedded down at a Talladega National Forest campground, equipped with a nice heated shower house. The next morning I slept in, then cruised westward toward the Mississippi state line.
On the return leg of
my Deep South Tour, in early April, I entered Alabama from Tupelo on I-22. That afternoon I stopped at two natural
wonders, Dismal Canyon and Natural Bridge, before settling in for the night at
a Bankhead National Forest campground.
The big stop on my second day was the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in
Huntsville. Very cool! Before leaving Alabama for Tennessee I stopped to see a
couple of Alabama’s “famous covered bridges.”
Who knew? But then it was on to
Chattanooga.