News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Port City Floats: New float barn aims to be inclusive for revelers
SUMMARY: Leticia Mayian and her family, familiar with the Mardi Gras culture in Mobile, recognized the struggle of float storage when they acquired three floats without a place to keep them. This led to the creation of Port City Floats, a unique facility that stores floats and promotes community involvement in Mardi Gras events. Located in a 16,000 sq. ft. building, it accommodates up to 20 floats and hosts various rentals for parties and gatherings. The Mayian family collaborates with local artists to design and build floats, aiming to pass on the artistry of float-making to younger generations and reinforce community ties.

A newly opened float barn in Mobile aims to be inclusive to anyone who wants to store their Mardi Gras floats and join in on the festivities.
News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Four people rescued, two taken to hospital after Birmingham apartment fire
SUMMARY: A fire broke out at an apartment building in Birmingham’s South Side, causing extensive damage, especially on the second floor. Firefighters rescued four people, two of whom were taken to the hospital while the other two were treated on the scene. The fire, reported just before 6:30 PM, produced visible smoke from Red Mountain. Both second-floor units were destroyed. The Red Cross is providing support to displaced residents, but none will be able to stay in their apartments. The condition of the hospitalized victims is still unknown, and additional resources were used to ensure everyone was evacuated safely.

Four people rescued, two taken to hospital after Birmingham apartment fire
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News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Girl With Autism Inspires Other Through Her Books | April 4, 2025 | News 19 at 9 p.m.
SUMMARY: A 13-year-old girl named Braylon, who has autism, is inspiring others through her book series “The Awesome Kid.” Diagnosed at age 3, she faced challenges in communication and social acceptance. With early intervention, Braylon learned to express herself, leading to her writing a book titled “Brooklyn’s First Day of School,” which addresses her experiences with bullying and the importance of acceptance. Now an accomplished young author, Braylon has published multiple books and aims to encourage others on the autism spectrum to embrace their journeys. She also recently joined her school basketball team, showcasing her growing confidence.

At the age of three Brailynn Camille’s mom says that she could barely put a sentence together.
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News from the South - Alabama News Feed
GOP budget would add an ‘unprecedented’ $5.8 trillion to the deficit, analysis finds
by Jennifer Shutt, Alabama Reflector
April 4, 2025
WASHINGTON — The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget released an analysis Friday showing the budget resolution Republicans plan to adopt later this month would allow Congress to add up to $5.8 trillion to the deficit during the next decade.
The organization wrote the reconciliation instructions included in the budget would allow GOP lawmakers to draft a bill later this year that could outpace the deficit impact of many big-name laws enacted during the last two administrations.
“A $5.8 trillion deficit-increasing bill would be unprecedented,” the analysis states. “It would add 14 times as much to the deficit than the bipartisan infrastructure law ($400 billion), more than three times as much as American Rescue Plan ($1.8 trillion), three times the 2020 CARES Act ($1.7 trillion), and nearly four times the original score of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act ($1.5 trillion). In fact, it would add more to the deficit than all four of these major laws combined.”
That deficit impact, CRFB wrote, “would be the equivalent of adding a large new welfare program to the federal deficit.”
No Democratic votes needed
Republicans in Congress must adopt a budget resolution in order to use the complex reconciliation process to pass many of their core campaign promises.
The special legislative pathway will let the GOP enact changes without needing the support of Democrats to get past the Senate’s 60-vote legislative filibuster.
The largest deficit increase within the package would come from extending the 2017 GOP tax law, about $4.5 trillion in deficits, and likely making other changes to the U.S. tax code, about $1.5 trillion.
House Republicans want to try to offset some of that $6 trillion total in new deficits by cutting about $1.5 trillion in federal spending, though exactly how they’d do that remains under discussion.
Centrist Republicans in Congress have raised concerns about the House’s instructions calling on the Energy and Commerce Committee to find at least $880 billion in spending cuts.
That panel oversees Medicare and Medicaid and couldn’t reach that level of spending cuts without making some substantial changes to one or both of the programs.
GOP leaders and President Donald Trump have repeatedly said they won’t touch Medicare, leaving Medicaid, the state-federal program for lower-income people, as the likely source of the funding cuts.
Senate GOP approach
Senate Republicans wrote themselves a much lower threshold for cutting government spending in the budget resolution — a $4 billion minimum from four different committees across the 10-year budget window.
The Senate instructions, CRFB wrote in its analysis, “would allow a reconciliation bill that is nearly as large as the largest federal spending programs.
“A bill adding $5.8 trillion to deficits would be more than three-quarters (77 percent) as large as all projected Medicaid spending. It would equal 69 percent of base defense spending over the same time period, including being three times as large as projected spending dedicated to the Army. It would even equal half of all net spending on Medicare and a third of all spending on Social Security.”
CRFB wrote that Congress should change its course now.
“Instead of passing a bill with an historically large deficit impact, lawmakers should use this opportunity to rein in borrowing with a fiscally responsible package that can set the stage for a permanent package of thoughtful tax extensions and budget savings that grows the economy and improves our debt outlook.”
The Senate is expected to vote sometime this weekend to approve the compromise budget resolution and send it back to the House for final approval.
Once both chambers vote to adopt it, they can formally begin writing, debating, amending and voting to approve the reconciliation package.
Last updated 1:26 p.m., Apr. 4, 2025
Alabama Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Alabama Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Brian Lyman for questions: info@alabamareflector.com.
The post GOP budget would add an ‘unprecedented’ $5.8 trillion to the deficit, analysis finds appeared first on alabamareflector.com
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