Stop rewarding exploitation
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Op-ed by Sen. Shay Shelnutt
As someone who had the honor of serving in the Alabama Legislature, I’ve seen firsthand the opportunities and challenges facing our great state. Alabama is blessed with strong communities, a rich history and hardworking people, but there’s one area where we’re being held back: our legal system.
Lawsuit abuse in Alabama is quietly draining our economy, raising costs for families and discouraging job growth. While other southern states like Florida and Georgia have modernized their legal systems to stop excessive litigation, Alabama risks falling behind unless we take real steps toward reform.
Too often, our courts are burdened with lawsuits that are more about exploiting legal loopholes than achieving justice. These abusive practices drive up insurance premiums, health care costs and the price of everyday goods. It’s not just an abstract problem. It’s hitting Alabama families where it hurts most: their wallets.
Businesses, especially small- and mid-sized ones, are forced to operate in a climate of legal uncertainty, where a single lawsuit, even a frivolous one, can mean the difference between staying open and shutting down. That’s not fair, and it’s not sustainable. We need to stop rewarding exploitation and start promoting fairness.
Other states have shown us what works. Florida passed commonsense reforms to reduce the abuse of litigation financing and ensure that only those truly harmed can seek damages. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp just signed new laws to limit the filing of meritless lawsuits that were clogging their courts and costing their citizens thousands every year.
These reforms have helped lower costs and made those states more attractive for businesses and workers alike.
Alabama should follow their lead. We must reform our comparative fault laws so that someone who is primarily responsible for their own injuries can’t collect damages. Additionally, we need to increase transparency in litigation financing to prevent predatory third-party funders from profiting at the expense of real victims. Finally, cracking down on inflated medical damages that artificially drive up settlement amounts and insurance costs will be a significant step forward in the fight to curb lawsuit abuse.
This isn’t about limiting justice. It’s about restoring balance and making sure our legal system works for the people of Alabama, not against them. Our lawmakers in Montgomery need to make lawsuit abuse reform a top priority this session. The future of our state’s economy depends on it.
We can build a more affordable, fair and prosperous Alabama, but only if we fix what’s broken in our legal system.
