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An Alabama bill proposes classifying the consumption of cannabis in a vehicle with a child present as a Class-A misdemeanor, regardless of the vehicle's state, driven by educator concerns that such usage during school drop-offs negatively impacts children's ability to learn. The legislation further requires offenders to take a drug safety course and mandates that a child smelling of cannabis be reported as suspected child abuse or neglect by mandatory reporters.

Alabama Bill Would Impose Harsh Penalties for Cannabis Consumption in Vehicles with Children Present 

Jan 6, 2026

TG Branfalt

Ganjapreneur



A bill proposed in Alabama would impose harsher penalties for individuals
who consume cannabis in vehicles with children present, ABC 33/40 News
reports. The legislation would classify smoking or vaping cannabis in a car
with a child present as a Class-A misdemeanor, regardless of whether the
vehicle is in motion, and whether the window is open or closed.

Democratic state Rep. Patrick Sellers said the bill aims to address
concerns that he’s heard from educators.

“I kept listening to the concerns of educators, administrators, principals
across the district, and one of the most alarming things is the smell and
the sight of usage of marijuana within the cars as they drop kids off. And
then kids have secondhand contact. … Marijuana usage has become almost
normal. There was a time when people wouldn’t do that before they dropped
their kids off at school. It’s affecting the ability for kids to learn
and comprehend and be coherent and have a productive day at school.” —
Sellers to ABC 33/40

The bill would also require offenders to attend an in-person course on the
dangers of drug use around children, require law enforcement to report
violations of the law to child welfare officials, and stipulate that
mandatory reporters file a report if a child smells of cannabis, treating
it as suspected child abuse or neglect.

The bill is in the chamber’s Public Safety and Homeland Security
Committee.

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