CCAA/BCA Partnership Update, April, 2009
April 23, 2009 by Admin
Filed under CCAA/BCA, CCAA/BCA News
To: CCAA Chamber Executives
From: Ralph Stacy, CCAA President & CEO
Date: April 9, 2009
Re: Partnership Conference Call
The third in a series of legislative update conference calls sponsored by the CCAA/BCA Partnership featured a special guest this week as Alabama Gov. Bob Riley briefed participants on the status of his agenda and answered submitted questions.
Riley, who was introduced by BCA Chairman and Huntsville-based financial advisor Phil Dotts, said he believes the legislative progress is being hampered by a coalition of lobbyists and lawmakers dedicated toward passage of a bill that legalizes the presence of electronic gaming machines in several locations across the state. The governor is strongly opposed to the bill and said he does not believe that advocates will achieve the votes necessary for its passage, but the focus on gambling has pushed other, more pressing, issues aside.
Among those issues, according to Riley, is the need for comprehensive ethics reform in state government. A package of bills to toughen ethics standards introduced on behalf of the governor several weeks ago has languished in committee with little to no action taken. He noted that the state’s ethics law has not been updated since 1973 and said frequent headlines of public officials being indicted and convicted demonstrates the need for reform.
“Alabama is beginning to develop a reputation for corruption, and if we do not begin to address it, in the next five or ten years, international companies will think twice about locating here,” Riley said. “How can anyone be against ethics?”
The governor labeled efforts by some legislators to accept new federal dollars for unemployment compensation that Riley has already turned down as “short sighted” and “missing the big picture.” He said accepting the additional funding would require Alabama to rewrite its unemployment compensation laws, and once the federal dollars are depleted, businesses across the state will be forced to pick up the burden in the “tens of millions of dollars” annually.
“The Midwest and Northeast have a hard time competing with the South, so congressmen from those areas trying to change the south,” Riley said. “They want to qualify more people for unemployment and drive up the cost of doing business in Alabama so their areas of the country can compete for the projects we’ve successfully recruited over the past few years.”
Turning his attention to education, Riley said a looming fight in the legislative budget process will decide whether state tax dollars are invested into classroom programs or into employment benefits for teachers and support personnel. He credited nationally-recognized programs like the Alabama Reading Initiative and the Alabama Math Science and Technology Initiative with raising standardized test scores and providing rural students with a level playing field in terms of education quality.
If spent wisely, according to Riley, funding from the federal stimulus package should help Alabama shore up its state budgets over the next two years. By that time, he hopes, the economic downturn should be in full recovery.
Riley closed his remarks by noting that Alabama’s economy, while less than robust, is in better condition than all of our sister southeastern states and highlighted successful industrial recruitment of companies such as ThyssenKrupp as one reason. Though our state’s unemployment rate has doubled, the governor said individual income earnings remain high, which is one sign of economic health.
Kirk Mancer, president of the Cullman Chamber and CCAA chair-elect, questioned the governor on the status of his bill granting subpoena power to the Ethics Commission when conducting investigations. Riley said the bill remains in committee, and all he wants is an “up or down” vote on the floor so citizens may know where legislators stand. He reiterated that two years of ethics abuses within the community college system and other areas of government could begin to retard economic development if allowed to continue.
The governor also mentioned that he has placed all state government contracts and expenditures in an on-line searchable database for taxpayers to review. Such transparency should be the norm, according to Riley, not the exception, and he encouraged conference call participants to demand action on ethics reform legislation.
Before ending his presentation and returning to matters of state, Riley congratulated The Partnership for becoming a significant and effective grassroots movement with considerable influence in state government. “Pick up your phones, make calls and put your influence to work,” Riley concluded.
BCA Senior Vice President for Governmental Affairs Quentin Riggins provided a brief overview of other legislation affecting Chamber officials and their members. He said legislation to remove the state sales tax from grocery items remains a central issue in the Alabama House, but hopes that efforts to remove the federal income tax deduction from the state tax code will begin to lessen as the end of the session draws near.
Negotiations continue over NRA-backed legislation allowing employees to bring firearms onto workplace property, according to BCA Director of Legislative Affairs Elizabeth Kennedy Lawlor. A compromise version of the bill has moved from committee in the House after the NRA accepted BCA-drafted exceptions based upon Georgia law. Employers such as car manufacturers, construction companies, utilities and others have policies governing firearm possession in the workplace, and the substitute version of the bill works to address their concerns.
In order to fully educate Chamber officials and their members on the issues surrounding additional federal unemployment dollars and their long-term impact on business expenses, BCA Vice President for Public Affairs and Communications Marty Sullivan said an informative packet, including talking points, has been emailed in .pdf format to conference call participants and other stakeholders. She suggested the material would be useful in contacting legislators on this important matter.
Riggins concluded the call by telling participants that House Speaker Seth Hammett will be invited to participate in the next briefing to provide his view of the session and its major legislation. The date and time of that call should be scheduled sometime within the next week.
CCAA/BCA: Building a better Alabama…through strong Chambers of Commerce
The Clay County Chamber of Commerce is a member of the CCAA/BCA -the Chamber of Commerce Association of Alabama (CCAA) and the
Business Council of Alabama (BCA). These two organizations provide a clearinghouse for business-related information and contacts that serve the needs of local Chamber professionals.
The following is an Overview of the two organizations and how they came together:
In 1937, as Alabama found itself recovering from the economic crisis of the Great Depression, the time had come for the business community of this great state to bring together allies of a common nature to help fulfill the need of an advocate for the men and women who helped provide the fuel of government-commerce-in all it’s varied forms and locations. Chambers of Commerce had long filled this role since their formation in England in the 1700’s as an extension of the European craft guilds, but the realization that city and county economies were bound by more of a regional or statewide nature than had been previously led the leadership of the Birmingham, Montgomery, Huntsville, Mobile, Dothan, Tuscaloosa, Alexander City, Anniston, Selma and Demopolis Chambers of Commerce, as well as representatives from allied organizations such as Alabama Power Company and The Montgomery Advertiser to form what was then known as the Alabama Association of Commercial Organizations. The original intent of this group of representatives of local business communities was to “foster the commercial, industrial, and recreational welfare of the State…”.
Throughout the next decades, this organization saw changes not only in the state and its economy, but also in the group itself. It grew more and more to be representative of the needs of local Chambers, and so changed it’s name to the Chamber of Commerce Executives of Alabama (CCEA) to the Chamber of Commerce Executive’s Association of Alabama (CCEAA), then, struggling with identity and mission, back to CCEA.
In 1997, sixty years after its formation, and realizing that Chambers of Commerce were still the premier local business advocate, the appellation Chamber of Commerce Association of Alabama (CCAA) was adopted. Along with this name change began the effort to bring this alliance from a part-time, volunteer-led group of Chamber executives to a true full-time, professionally-led association that represented the needs and issues that affect the over 110 Chambers of Commerce in that make up its membership.
In 1999, after carefully marshalling funding and support, the Board of Directors of CCAA hired its first professional director to head the organization. Ralph Stacy, former Executive Director of the Greenville Area Chamber of Commerce, was hired to guide CCAA on its mission of “building a better Alabama…through strong Chambers of Commerce”. Stacy still heads the organization as its President and Chief Executive Officer, having earned during his tenure the prestigious Certified Association Executive (CAE) designation from the American Society of Association Executives.
While CCAA made headway in representing the needs of local Chambers and their professional staff, as well as providing training and conference opportunities for all Alabama Chambers, the potential of the strength of local Chambers came to the forefront with the hiring of William J. “Billy” Canary as the President and CEO of the Business Council of Alabama (BCA).
The BCA was formed in 1985 with the merger of the Alabama Chamber of Commerce and the Association of Industrial Manufacturers. BCA is recognized as the State Chamber for Alabama by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. BCA and CCAA had always maintained cordial relations, but the linkage between local Chambers and BCA was somehow incomplete it its delivery method.
Canary, former White House staffer under President George H.W. Bush, and former President of the American Trucking Association, immediately began forging a stronger alliance with CCAA through increased interaction and participation in local Chamber events and with local Chamber executives. This led to the formation in late 2003 of The Partnership, a formal document signed by BCA and CCAA leadership which linked together, for the first time, the power of BCA’s 5,000 members with the nearly 60,000 local businesses represented by Chambers. This has created a voice for business unlike any other in America.
Not only was this a bold move by both organizations, it also proved to be the first of its kind in America. It has been recognized by both the U.S. Chamber and the American Chamber of Commerce Executives as being a unique program, and is currently under implementation in other states as a model for state Chamber association operations.
CCAA continues to serve it’s members by providing information on governmental affairs, including hosting a joint conference call every fifth legislative day with members of the BCA’s Governmental Affairs staff and local Chamber professionals; by communicating through it’s website (www.alabamachambers.org) issues that affect the local business community; by holding statewide membership events every quarter that address the professional development and networking needs of Chamber professionals; and by providing a clearinghouse for business-related information and contacts that serve the needs of local Chamber professionals.
For more information on CCAA, please contact L. Ralph Stacy, CAE, at 334-264-2112 or lrstacy@alaweb.com. Visit their website at www.alabamachambers.org.
The Chamber of Commerce Association of Alabama: “building a better Alabama…through strong Chambers of Commerce”.
CCAA/BCA Partnership Update, Feb. 18, 2009
March 5, 2009 by Admin
Filed under CCAA/BCA News
To: CCAA Chamber Executives
From: Ralph Stacy, CCAA President & CEO
Date: February 18, 2009
Re: Partnership Conference Call
As part of our on-going efforts to keep member Chambers informed, aware and involved in the legislative process, the CCAA/BCA Partnership held the first of what will be several 2009 Regular Session updates via conference call Wednesday afternoon. For those who were unable to participate or desire a review, we are providing this synopsis of the legislation and issues discussed.
Following a brief introduction by CCAA President Ralph Stacy, BCA Senior Vice President for Governmental Affairs Quentin Riggins provided an overview of how he sees the legislative session progressing after just five days. Riggins noted that the 35-member State Senate currently has only 32 members serving due to the election of Parker Griffith to Congress, the recent death of Pat Lindsey and the conviction of E.B. McClain on felony charges of abusing taxpayer money. As a result, the narrow voting margin between the majority and minority factions in the Senate is likely to prevent any controversial measures from passing the upper chamber.
That reality, coupled with the fast-approaching 2010 election cycle, has kept workers compensation legislation, severance tax bills and other anti-business measures seen over the last several years from being introduced, according to Riggins. Gov. Bob Riley, Senate General Fund Committee Chairman Roger Bedford and other leaders have also indicated that they do not see a need for new taxes or revenue measures in the current session since the federal stimulus package has been approved by Congress.
Victor Vernon, BCA’s Director of Legislative Policy, briefed participants on an industrial incentive bill approved by the House on Tuesday. The bill provides tax incentives, exemptions and rebates for the commercial production of film and television projects in Alabama. The state has been without such incentives for several years and, as a result, even movies that are set in Alabama have been filmed in other southeastern states. The legislation caps the aggregate incentives offered at $5 million in 2009, $7 million in 2010 and $10 million thereafter.
Another provision of the same legislation provides tax incentives that encourage investment partnerships to operate within the state.
Several bills were discussed in detail by Elizabeth Kennedy Lawlor, the BCA Director of Legislative Affairs. Among them was a bi-partisan package of legislation that seeks to block illegal immigrants from receiving public benefits, prohibit the establishment of “sanctuary cities” in Alabama and establish penalties for transporting illegal immigrants into the state for commercial purposes. Lawlor said BCA will continue to ensure that such legislation places the burden of proving employees’ citizenship status on the federal government rather than on businesses and their human resources departments.
A child labor law making its way through the Alabama House was another topic of interest. HB144, sponsored by Rep. Frank McDaniel (D – Albertville), makes it easier for a business to employ a minor of 14 years of age or above in a part-time status while ensuring the Alabama Department of Labor continues to monitor and protect the interest of such workers.
HB217, a bill by Rep. Terry Spicer (D – Elba), deals with the construction and establishment of toll roads and toll bridges. Lawlor informed those participating on the call that BCA is working to ensure that the legislation does not allow toll roads to be made out of currently existing non-toll roadways.
The BCA Senior Vice President for Public Affairs and Communications, Marty Sullivan, provided a briefing on the new Capitol Impact website accessible by those participating in the CCAA/BCA Partnership. Available under the “Legislation & Advocacy” heading on www.bcatoday.org, Capitol Impact provides information on all bills being tracked by the Business Council and The Partnership, their status, why they are being tracked and whether they are being supported or opposed by the BCA.
Those who access the website can use it to privately post their thoughts, comments and concerns about specific bills, and that information is immediately relayed to the BCA Governmental Affairs Division for review. An on-line tutorial regarding how to best utilize the website will be made available in the near future.
BCA President William J. Canary concluded the call by announcing that the annual BCA Legislative Reception, scheduled for March 3, will be themed as a “Tribute to Alabama Chambers.” The event, heavily attended by legislators, members of the governor’s senior staff and other influential Alabama leaders, will serve as an effective showcase for the work and accomplishments of our local chambers of commerce.
He also asked that chamber executives, chamber board members and others on the local level utilize the Capitol Impact website. Calling it a “critical advocacy mechanism,” Canary said the website will help The Partnership identify local grassroots teams that are ready to contact individual legislators in support or opposition of important legislation affecting the business community.
As the session concluded, participants were reminded that The Partnership will sponsor another conference call on Friday, February 20, at 12:00 p.m. with David Perry, an attorney recently hired by the Riley Administration to help distribute approximately $3 billion that Alabama will receive as its share of the federal stimulus package. Perry will discuss various grants and resources that will be made available on the local level and answer questions from CCAA Chamber participants who are interested in attracting stimulus dollars to their communities.
About Clay County Chamber
February 20, 2009 by Admin
Filed under About the Chamber
When the great and friendly folks of Clay County come together – the sky’s the limit! We’ve been called the “Volunteer County of Alabama” for many reasons. When friends and neighbors need help, Clay County folks show up. When these same folks join the Clay County Chamber of Commerce, things get done, too! That friendly and volunteer attitude of all the Chamber members and the entire community unifies us and produces extraordinary accomplishments in our county.
The mission of the Clay County Chamber of Commerce is to provide leadership and promote the betterment of the economic, civic and social well-being of all Clay County.
We consider Clay County as the “Heart of East Central Alabama” for many reasons. Located in the foothills of the Talladega National Forest, we are truly at the crossroads of the scenic beauty of east central Alabama. Two major highways, Alabama 9 and 77, connect us north, south, east and west. We’re blessed with abundant natural beauty, lots of rural land, hard working people, and a small town atmosphere people enjoy working and living in.
The Clay County Chamber of Commerce works with our business community to be the “point man” on promoting all our businesses. The Chamber is a resource center that helps people establish, grow and improve business. The Chamber of Commerce is a voluntary organization supported by member investors, the City of Ashland, The City of Lineville, and the County government.
The Chamber of Commerce is located between the cities of Lineville and Ashland on Alabama Highway 9 in the Farmer’s Market facility. Our staff is small – one full time Executive Director, Mary Patchunka-Smith and a few volunteers. That’s Mary in the photo with Governor Riley in 2008 receiving our award for participation in the 2008 Alabama Year of the Arts. The Chamber office is open from 8 am to 3 pm, Monday through Friday but you can get a lot of information off of our website and leave an email anytime. We answer all phone messages and emails promptly. We welcome inquiries from visitors and citizens alike.
The Clay County Chamber of Commerce exists to provide leadership and a strong and effective voice to our citizens and business communities – all working toward common goals. Those goals include the orderly growth and economic development of all of Clay County .
We believe communication is a vital key to Chamber of Commerce membership. Problem solving, positive publicity and strong public relations grow from the joined efforts of people working together. Chamber of Commerce forums and programs are where the seeds for business opportunity are planted. Whether it is after-hours casual conversations, morning coffee networking, grand opening business acquaintances, or cooperation in civic projects, members have the chance to establish the relationships that nurture individual business and bolster the success of our community initiatives.
The Clay County Chamber of Commerce is here for you – whether you live and work here now or are considering establishing a new home or business in our county. We will do whatever we can to assist you. It is our hope that we have shared a lot of ourselves and our county through our website and look forward to hearing from you soon.



