I have been      going to Montgomery
 each week to talk to the      legislators in the State House. Our bill 
is HB-54 that has passed the House      and now has passed the first 
committee in the Senate. This week the      Governmental Affairs 
Committee passed HB-54 by a vote of nine yea and two      abstentions. 
No no votes. There are two more news articles this week that      tell 
about what is going on:
     
     Underwater Cultural Act Passes Out of Senate Committee
By Bill BrittAlabama Political Reporter
For years a bullet, buckle, arrowhead or any old item found in an Alabama waterway way was considered property of the State of Alabama. The Historical Commission so jealously guard any artifact that picking a arrowhead out of a stream could land a young boy or girl in jail.
Due to an over-zealous interpretation of the law, historical memorabilia has rotted and vanished in the muddy waters of the state.
Rep. Dr. Jim McClendon (R-Springville) has fought to see the law amended, today he passed another milestone as HB54 also known as the Underwater Cultural Resources Act, received a favorable report from the Senate Committee.
The bill was vigorously challenged by the Alabama Historical Commission, a state department created by the State’s Legislature. In the agency's view, any artifact found in an Alabama waterway is the sole property of the state.
Alabama native, Steve Phillips, a professional diver and author of many books on historical artifacts said he was pleased with the Senate's findings. Phillips is the only person every arrested and tried under the Historical Commission’s interpretation of the law. Phillips was not found guilt of the offense but was nevertheless, charged and had to defend himself at considerable expense and inconvenience. At the Senate hearing Frank White, executive director of Historical Commission asked, “The question that I have as Executive Director of Historical Commission is what is wrong with the law as it is now? If a diver wants to dive, they come and get a permit from us. They go dive, they find whatever, they bring it up. We will look at it and make a judgement decision about what is historically significant for the state of Alabama and whether it ought to remain with the state, then the diver can take the remaining finds with them.”
Mr. White’s assertion that, “...The diver can take the remaining finds with them,” has not proven to be the case. Even though not convicted the Historical Commission has yet to return Phillip’s property.
During the hearing Sen. Trip Pittman (R-Daphne), asked Director White, “ What about the idea of historical doesn't have anything to do with the value. So, you could find something that had value that didn't have historical significance and it would still go to the diver, correct, under the current law?” White answered, "Correct.”
Rep. McClendon later stated that divers have turned over artifacts to the Historical Commission and have found that those items they trusted to the commission were sold and shipped to museums out of state.
Sen. Dick Brewbaker (R-Montgomery) asked White, “From the state point of view or archeologists that work for you…sites that are underwater, what projects does the state have going on now to recover these? Are there any active ones except the one in Mobile Bay? Other than that, There is no state-sponsored recovery of these historical artifacts."
White responded that he was correct.
McClendon as said on numerous occasions, “The current law is confusing and has caused much consternation among those people who wish to retrieve those artifacts that no one else is going after. The Historical Commission, over the years, has done little to explore, retrieve or preserve these artifacts. Unless these [private citizen divers] people are allowed to do this, the artifacts will stay in the mud and continue to deteriorate and be lost to future generations of Alabamians.”
Two amendments where added to the bill. One provides that no such artifacts are recovered by the process of mechanical and/or hydraulic dredging. The other amendment came from Senate Minority Leader Roger Bedford (D-Russellville) stating, [It] shall be a Class A misdemeanor to violate the provisions of this law. This would be equivalent to a speeding ticket, according to Bedford.
Here's another article from the Tuscaloosa News:
Warning issued to Alabama Historical Commission
Lawmaker says members should not try to intervene in the legislative process
By Stephanie Taylor and Dana Beyerle, Staff Writers
###
     
The
 bills      have had many articles in the newspapers, TV and radio this 
year. Luckily      most of the reporters have spent time enough this 
time to understand more      about what the bills do and not listen to 
the false claims of our      professional archaeologist opponents. I was
 amazed at the meeting this week      to hear what Dr. Frank White who 
is the new director of the Alabama      Historical Commission said. Dr. 
White is a nice man but he is clueless      concerning dive law in Alabama.
 He should study his own agency’s      documents about dive laws. I have
 twice given him copies of what is allowed      and what is not allowed 
concerning isolated finds underwater on state      (public) lands in Alabama. The law is confusing and that is      all we are trying to fix.
This
 is what is allowed according to the AHC      and the Alabama Department
 of Tourism as well as the Conservation      Department.
His confusion is what the current bill is trying to fix. Law enforcement officers are confused as much as Dr. White. HB-54 will take out three words (whether or not) that makes the law confusing. What is legal now will be the same as what will be when the bill passes. What we hope to accomplish is to not have confusing words cause the public to be unduly detained. No one is being arrested, because they are violating no law, but several people have been detained for many hours while the law is made clear to the law enforcement officers. Professional archaeologists have been guilty many times of claiming to law enforcement that the public is violating a law. This has been done on dry land on public and private property for many years in an effort to force contractors and individuals as well as state agencies such as the Department of Transportation to hire a professional archaeologist to give permission for any type of construction. Now they want to do the same underwater to make money for the professional archaeologists. Professional archaeologists are involved in any work done on Cultural Resources such as shipwrecks. HB-54 does not change in any way the protection of cultural resources. All current and future cultural resources are controlled and protected by the state.
I
 understand the frustration of the      professional archaeologists. 
There are too many of them. The colleges turn      them out by the 
thousands and tell them that there are jobs for them when      there are
 very few real jobs for these      kids.
Archaeology
      should be taught as a minor and encouraged as a real great hobby. I
 am an      amateur archaeologist and an amateur historian. That doesn’t
 mean that I or      millions of other people are somehow inferior to 
the professionals it just      means that we have real jobs and enjoy 
our hobbies for love not money. I      don’t blame the kids for wanting 
to be like Indiana Jones and I don’t blame      the parents who 
foolishly spend huge sums of money on tuition in our      colleges only 
to find that there are no jobs for their kids. I do blame the      
colleges and professors for misleading our kids. My three children all 
went      to Alabama
      colleges and studied business or geology. They now run their own 
business.      The colleges should concentrate on graduating students 
that can provide a      service or trade to serve the public. What our 
country does not need and      cannot afford are any more regulators to 
harass the public. We don’t want      them, we don’t need them and we 
can’t afford them. As far as preserving      history goes we amateurs do
 a much better and cheaper job as well as serving      the public 
better. I am an average collector of artifacts from The War      Between
 The States. I have helped write fifteen books to help identify      
relics. These books are the standard books used worldwide to identify 
relics      from the War. I have put thousands of relics that I bought 
or found in      public museums to serve the public. I don’t get paid 
for any of these      services. I am also a professional preservationist
 of artillery projectiles.      The largest collections in the south 
were preserved by me and my sons. Some      times I charge and many 
times I don’t. My interest is in saving history and      I know that 
history is not preserved by letting artifacts rust or erode away      in
 the turbulent rivers of Alabama.
 I also know that divers will      explore our rivers and will find 
isolated finds. I want these divers to not      be afraid to share their
 knowledge with the public. We don’t need any      restrictive rules 
about isolated finds to intimidate people. They will be      happy to 
share their knowledge and artifacts just as I and millions of      
others do. We don’t need an incompetent agency to oversee divers or     
 artifacts that they know nothing about. Whether it be arrowheads, 
bottles,      relics or fossils, the public knows best. We write the 
books, we fill the      museums and we don’t cost anything. We also 
spend a ton of personal money      that the state government doesn’t 
have to. We are good for tourism and spend      our money in Alabama
 businesses instead of going to      more friendly states. HB-54 is 
supported by the Alabama Department of      Tourism, the Poarch Indians 
of Alabama and most museums that are informed      about what the bill 
does. We have 77,000 miles of waterways that need to be      explored by
 our over 100,000 divers. I am 66 years old now and pretty far up      
the trail but I anxiously await exciting historical information that 
will be      found by our divers (aquanauts).
Please      continue to Support HB54 and forward this email to your friends and      post on all interested web pages, facebook and      blogs.
Help us      Save Our Lost History.
Steve      Phillips
Southern Skin      Divers Supply
205-595-3052