Week 2 Session Recap: Trey's Law Passes the House

The second week of the 2026 legislative session brought meaningful progress on several fronts, including a major milestone for survivor protections in Alabama.

Trey's Law Passes Unanimously

I'm proud to share that Trey's Law passed the House floor this week with 98 yes votes and zero opposition. This bill prohibits non-disclosure agreements from silencing survivors of sexual abuse. While settlement agreements can still protect financial terms and other details, victims can never be forced to stay quiet about the abuse itself.

The bill is named after Trey Carlock, who took his own life after an NDA prevented him from speaking about the abuse he endured. His sister, Elizabeth Phillips, came to Montgomery months ago to share Trey's story with me, and she has been advocating for this change across the country. Her courage and persistence made this possible.

A companion bill carried by Senator Matt Woods passed the Senate the day before our House vote, so both bills now move to the opposite chambers. I look forward to seeing Trey's Law signed into law and hope it serves as a model for other states.

Camp Safety Bill Coming Soon

Work continues on the camp safety bill that will honor Sarah Marsh and the 26 other young women who lost their lives in a tragic flood at a Texas camp last year. This week we had productive conversations with the Alabama Camp Association, camp owners, and the Emergency Management Agency.

The bill is in its final drafting stages, and I plan to file it next Thursday. Our goal is to codify commonsense safety standards - emergency response plans, criminal background checks, and other measures that responsible camps already follow. No parent should have to wonder whether their child is safe at summer camp.

Supporting Law Enforcement: Self-Defense Evidence Bill

I also passed a bill out of the Judiciary Committee this week on behalf of our district attorneys and the Office of Prosecution Services. This legislation addresses a gap in how self-defense claims are evaluated.

Under this bill, if someone claims they killed or injured another person in self-defense, they must retain the weapon they used. If the weapon has been disposed of, a rebuttable presumption is established that the act was not in self-defense. The accused can still overcome that presumption by explaining to the court why the weapon is no longer available, but the burden shifts appropriately. This is a reasonable step to ensure that self-defense claims are supported by evidence.

Investing in Education

Education remains one of my top priorities, and this week I filed a bill to make computer science a high school graduation requirement in Alabama. We've made great strides in recent years - my computer science education bill passed in 2019 required every high school to offer at least one CS course - but we need to go further. In today's economy, computer science literacy is as foundational as reading and math. Our students deserve to graduate prepared for the jobs of tomorrow.

Session Timeline and What's Ahead

Leadership remains focused on an efficient session, and I expect us to wrap up by early April - roughly two weeks ahead of the normal schedule. With primary elections on May 19, the priority is passing the budgets, moving good legislation through, and getting members back to their districts.

Weather Update for Jefferson County

Finally, a quick note on the weather. I receive regular updates from Jefferson County's Emergency Management Agency, and the latest reports are more encouraging than earlier forecasts. It looks like our area may see rain rather than ice, though we should still expect freezing temperatures from Sunday night through Tuesday. Please take precautions, check on neighbors, and stay safe.

As always, if you have questions or concerns about anything happening at the state level, don't hesitate to reach out. Hearing from you helps me serve District 46 better.

Until next week,

David Faulkner
Alabama House District 46