Senators debated and adopted an amendment to House Bill 282 that changes how community punishment and corrections programs interact with subsequent prison commitments. The floor amendment requires that if a defendant serving a sentence under a community corrections program is later convicted and sentenced to imprisonment, the defendant “shall be immediately removed from the supervision of the community punishment and corrections program and confined in the Alabama Department of Corrections until such time as a subsequent sentence of confinement is completed.”
Supporters said the change corrects gaps in practice where a judge’s order for DOC custody was not being carried out and a defendant remained in the community program. Senator Barfoot and other senators described real-world examples where a person subject to confinement was not taken into DOC custody, then later left the program without the custodial sentence being enforced. Senators discussed how the amendment would require better interagency communications between courts, the department of corrections and community corrections administrators to prevent implementation lapses.
Floor debate focused on operational issues — how pickup orders are transmitted, which judge’s order has priority, and whether district judges as well as circuit judges would be affected. Senators emphasized that the change is designed to support public safety and to preserve community corrections as a rehabilitative option while ensuring that if a subsequent custodial sentence is imposed, it is executed.
Senators made the substantive removal-and-confinement provision effective immediately on the floor; the remainder of the act had a later effective date (October 1, 2026) for other statutory changes. The amended bill passed by roll call during the session.