Sunday Bulletin 5/31/26
Sunday Bulletin 5/31/26May 28, 2026Church Street Methodist Church
Sunday Bulletin 5/31/26May 28, 2026Church Street Methodist Church Bulletin 5-31-26 bulletin – Trinity Sunday.pubDownload
Sunday Bulletin 5/31/26May 28, 2026Church Street Methodist Church
Sunday Bulletin 5/31/26May 28, 2026Church Street Methodist Church Bulletin 5-31-26 bulletin – Trinity Sunday.pubDownload

Local News Florence sewer upgrade project to begin June 8 across multiple neighborhoods Florence is set to begin a major sewer upgrade impacting several neighborhoods on June 8, lasting 90 days, as city officials coordinate with local engineers. Credit: WZDX Author: Austin Pylant Published: 10:09 AM CDT June 2, 2026 Updated: 10:09 AM CDT June 2, 2026 FLORENCE, Ala. — The City of Florence Water/Wastewater Department is preparing to begin a major sewer upgrade project that will impact several neighborhoods beginning June 8, officials said. BLD Services, LLC, in coordination with Engineers of the South, will begin Phase 2 of the SRF-funded concrete and clay sanitary sewer upgrades, a project expected to take about 90 days to complete. This story continues below. More in Local Hillsboro VFD adds new EMS vehicle Huntsville residents push for action over growing noise along Research Park Boulevard Huntsville residents seek solutions to traffic noise and safety concerns from Research Park Blvd. During construction, authorized personnel from BLD Services, Engineers of the South and/or the City of Florence Water/Wastewater Department will need access to sanitary sewer infrastructure located within rights-of-way along city streets and in backyards of homes in the affected areas. Officials say work will take place across multiple subdivisions and corridors, including: Forest Hills Subdivision Wright Drive (Cloverdale Road to just east of Little John Street)Flens AvenueWaldridge StreetNottingham Road2900 Block of Alexander StreetForest Hills School Property Railroad Avenue Area 1300 Block of James Street500 Block of Malone Circle Rickwood & Edgemont Subdivisions Courtney Avenue1900 Block of Hermitage DriveFord StreetDuntreath AvenueDuntreath Circle1200 Block of Rickwood Road Florence Boulevard Area Lincoln StreetJefferson StreetOffice Depot Property Close Ad { "@context": "http://schema.org", "@type": "NewsArticle", "headline": "Florence sewer upgrade project to begin June 8 across multiple neighborhoods", "datePublished": "10:09 AM CDT June 2, 2026", "dateModified": "10:09 AM CDT June 2, 2026", "mainEntityOfPage": { "@type": "WebPage", "@id": "https://www.rocketcitynow.com/article/news/local/florence-sewer-upgrade-project-across-multiple-neighborhoods/525-570f9249-e48a-4574-a3f9-954da37d37e7" }, "author": { "@type": "Person", "name": "Austin Pylant" }, "publisher": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "WZDX", "logo": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://www.rocketcitynow.com/assets/shared-images/logos/amp/wzdx.png", "width": 340, "height": 60 } }, "image": null }
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Lease type determines repair responsibility in an Alabama commercial lease — not default law. In a triple-net lease, the tenant pays for most repairs, including HVAC, plumbing, and roof maintenance; in a full-service gross lease, the landlord covers nearly all operating costs. Most disputes over commercial repairs in Huntsville and Madison County arise not from ambiguous law but from lease language that tenants did not read closely before signing. Contact DEAN CRE Key Takeaways Lease structure — NNN, modified gross, or full-service gross — determines who pays for HVAC, roof, plumbing, and structural repairs in Alabama commercial properties. Triple net tenants in Alabama bear the broadest repair obligations, often including HVAC replacement, roof membrane maintenance, and interior plumbing systems. Full-service gross leases shift most repair costs to the landlord but typically exclude tenant-caused damage and interior build-out maintenance. Repair obligations negotiated at the LOI stage consistently produce better tenant outcomes than disputes resolved mid-lease. Repair obligations buried in lease language cost Huntsville tenants thousands of dollars in unexpected maintenance bills every year. Dean CRE’s tenant advisory services review repair and maintenance clauses before you sign — so the cost allocation is clear before you take occupancy. How Does Lease Type Determine Who Pays for Repairs in Alabama? Lease type is the primary variable controlling repair responsibility in every Alabama commercial transaction. A triple net lease (NNN) requires the tenant to pay base rent plus property taxes, insurance, and most operating expenses — including maintenance and repair of building systems. A modified gross lease splits those costs between landlord and tenant according to negotiated terms. A full-service gross lease bundles operating costs into the base rent, with the landlord absorbing routine maintenance. Alabama commercial lease law, governed by contract principles under Alabama Code Title 35, imposes no statutory default allocating repair responsibility between commercial landlord and tenant — the statute defers to contract terms for commercial transactions rather than prescribing a repair obligation by law. The lease document controls entirely. Tenants who sign without reviewing the maintenance and repair article of their lease frequently discover mid-term that they owe costs — HVAC replacement, roof patching, or plumbing repairs — that they assumed the landlord would cover. If you’re ready to get started, call us now! Call or Text Us 256-270-9466 Why the Repair Article Is the Most Contested Lease Clause in North Alabama Commercial repair disputes in Huntsville and Madison County arise from 3 sources: vague language about who maintains the HVAC system, silence on roof repair responsibility beyond normal wear, and disagreement over whether a plumbing failure qualifies as a capital repair (landlord) or routine maintenance (tenant). Understanding the types of commercial leases in Alabama before entering any negotiation is the first step toward avoiding these disputes. How the Maintenance Article Should Be Read The maintenance and repair article of a commercial lease typically assigns responsibility across 4 categories worth mapping: (1) structural and exterior components, (2) building systems (HVAC, electrical, plumbing), (3) interior finishes and fixtures, and (4) common areas. Each category may carry a different cost allocation depending on the lease type. Tenants should map every repair category to a named party before executing any lease in Huntsville’s commercial market. Who Pays for HVAC in Alabama Commercial Leases? HVAC responsibility is the single most frequently disputed repair obligation in North Alabama commercial leases. In a triple-net lease, the tenant typically pays for all HVAC maintenance and repairs — and in many NNN leases, the tenant bears the cost of a full HVAC unit replacement if the system fails during the lease term. In a modified gross lease, responsibility depends on the negotiated terms: some assign HVAC maintenance to the tenant and replacement to the landlord; others split costs based on a defined dollar threshold. In a full-service gross lease, the landlord covers HVAC maintenance and replacement as part of the bundled operating cost. A standard HVAC replacement for a 3,000-square-foot commercial space in Huntsville, Alabama, ran between $8,000 and $15,000 in 2025, according to RS Means commercial cost data. A tenant who signed an NNN lease without negotiating an HVAC capital replacement cap absorbs the full cost — a budget exposure most small-business tenants do not anticipate at lease signing. HVAC Maintenance vs. HVAC Replacement — A Critical Distinction Most commercial leases distinguish between HVAC maintenance (filter changes, seasonal servicing, minor repairs) and HVAC replacement (a full unit swap when the system reaches the end of its life). NNN leases frequently assign both to the tenant. Modified gross leases often assign maintenance to the tenant and replacement to the landlord — but only if the lease explicitly draws that distinction. Tenants negotiating a commercial lease LOI should request an express maintenance-versus-replacement distinction in the HVAC clause and a dollar threshold above which the landlord assumes the repair cost. HVAC Age Clauses and Capital Reserve Protections Tenants signing leases on older Huntsville commercial buildings — particularly industrial and flex properties along Research Park Boulevard and the I-565 corridor — should request an HVAC condition disclosure before execution and negotiate an age cap clause. An age cap clause transfers responsibility for replacing any HVAC unit older than a defined age (typically 10 years) to the landlord, regardless of lease type. Dean CRE’s tenant representation team routinely negotiates age-cap protections for Huntsville tenants signing NNN leases for second-generation commercial space. Who Is Responsible for Roof Repairs in Alabama Commercial Leases? Roof repair responsibility depends on the lease type and includes a structural/non-structural distinction that most tenants overlook. In a triple-net lease, the tenant typically pays for roof maintenance—sealing, patching, and routine upkeep of the roof membrane. Structural roof repairs, meaning repairs to the roof deck, joists, or building envelope caused by age or defect rather than tenant action, are more commonly assigned to the landlord even in NNN leases — but only if the lease says so explicitly. Silence regarding structural roof repairs in an NNN lease defaults to the tenant’s responsibility under Alabama contract principles. In a modified gross lease, roof maintenance is typically the landlord’s responsibility, and most professionally negotiated modified gross leases in Madison County expressly exclude roof and structural components from tenant obligations. Full-service gross leases assign all roof repair and replacement to the landlord as part of the operating expense bundle. The Roof Capital Replacement Problem in NNN Leases A full roof replacement for a 5,000-square-foot commercial building in North Alabama costs $20,000 to $45,000 in 2025, depending on materials and pitch. NNN tenants who have not negotiated a roof replacement carve-out face this exposure on older buildings. The standard negotiating position for tenants is to cap NNN roof obligations at maintenance and patching — and assign replacement of the roof structure and membrane to the landlord when replacement cost exceeds a defined dollar threshold, typically $5,000 to $10,000 per occurrence. How to Identify Roof Responsibility Before Signing Tenants reviewing a commercial lease should locate the maintenance and repair article and confirm 3 things about roof obligations worth verifying: (1) whether the tenant’s obligation covers the membrane only or the full roof structure, (2) whether a dollar cap limits the tenant’s exposure per repair event (3) whether landlord approval is required before the tenant initiates any roof repair. Reviewing the lease negotiation strategy before execution gives tenants a framework to address all 3 points at the LOI stage. An unexpected repair obligation can turn a profitable lease into an operating loss within 12 months. Dean CRE’s commercial lease representation team negotiates maintenance and repair clauses in Huntsville and Madison County transactions so tenants understand every dollar of exposure before occupancy begins. If you’re ready to get started, call us now! Call or Text Us 256-270-9466 Who Handles Plumbing and Structural Repairs in Alabama Commercial Leases? Plumbing responsibility in Alabama commercial leases follows the interior-versus-exterior distinction. Interior plumbing — pipes, fixtures, and drains within the leased premises — is typically the tenant’s responsibility in NNN and modified gross leases. Exterior plumbing, meaning the building’s main lines, sewer connections, and underground infrastructure, is more commonly assigned to the landlord across all lease types. Full-service gross leases assign all plumbing repair to the landlord as part of the operating cost bundle. Structural repairs — foundation, load-bearing walls, and building envelope — are almost universally assigned to the landlord in Alabama commercial leases, regardless of lease type. A landlord who refuses to make structural repairs that render the premises unsafe or unusable may face a claim of constructive eviction under Alabama contract law. Tenants whose landlords delay structural repairs should document the condition in writing and consult the property management obligations that govern their building before taking action. Electrical Systems and Who Bears the Cost Electrical repair responsibilities mirror the plumbing structure: interior electrical systems serving the leased premises are typically the tenant’s obligation under NNN leases, while the building’s main service panel, exterior wiring, and shared electrical infrastructure remain the landlord’s responsibility. Modified gross leases vary — some assign all electrical to the landlord, others split by location (panel versus premises). Full-service gross leases include all electrical in the landlord’s operating cost obligation. Distinguishing Capital Repairs From Routine Maintenance The capital-versus-maintenance distinction governs cost allocation in every lease type. Routine maintenance — replacing light fixtures, clearing drains, patching drywall — is nearly always the tenant’s obligation regardless of lease structure. Capital repairs — replacing a roof, upgrading electrical service, repairing a foundation — are typically the landlord’s responsibility under modified gross and full-service leases and are negotiable under NNN leases. Tenants reviewing property management FAQs for their building type can identify which repair categories their landlord has historically treated as capital versus maintenance. What Does a NNN Tenant Actually Owe for Maintenance in Alabama? A triple-net tenant in Alabama owes base rent plus 3 categories of operating expenses: property taxes, building insurance, and maintenance and repair of the leased premises and its systems. In practice, a NNN tenant’s maintenance obligation in a North Alabama commercial lease encompasses HVAC servicing and repair, interior plumbing and electrical maintenance, pest control, parking lot upkeep where the tenant has exclusive use, and janitorial services. The breadth of NNN maintenance exposure is why tenant advisors consistently recommend negotiating repair caps and carve-outs at the LOI stage. Understanding how CAM charges interact with NNN maintenance obligations is essential for tenants in multi-tenant buildings. CAM charges cover shared area maintenance — parking lots, lobbies, landscaping — while NNN maintenance obligations cover the tenant’s exclusive space and systems. Tenants who confuse CAM and NNN obligations frequently underfund maintenance reserves and face end-of-lease restoration demands from landlords. NNN Lease Maintenance Caps and Why Tenants Need Them NNN maintenance caps are not standard in NNN leases; tenants must negotiate them. A NNN maintenance cap limits the tenant’s annual out-of-pocket repair exposure to a defined dollar amount — anything above the cap becomes the landlord’s responsibility. Cap structures in Huntsville’s commercial market typically set tenant maintenance liability at a per-square-foot annual amount, with the landlord responsible for costs above that threshold. Tenants exploring how to lease commercial space in North Alabama should treat a maintenance cap as a non-negotiable agenda item in any NNN negotiation. Modified Gross Lease Maintenance — What the Split Looks Like A modified gross lease allocates maintenance costs through a negotiated split that varies by property and landlord. The most common structure in Madison County’s office and flex market assigns HVAC maintenance, interior repairs, and janitorial services to the tenant. At the same time, the landlord covers roof, structure, exterior, and common-area maintenance. Tenants reviewing retail property leasing options in Huntsville should confirm whether the lease is a true modified gross or an NNN with selective landlord carve-outs — the distinction determines thousands of dollars in annual maintenance exposure. How to Negotiate Repair Obligations Before Signing Any Alabama Commercial Lease Repair and maintenance obligations should be negotiated at the letter of intent stage — not during lease redlines when landlord leverage is highest. Tenants in Huntsville’s commercial market should address 4 repair issues worth covering in every LOI: HVAC maintenance versus replacement responsibility, with a dollar threshold distinguishing maintenance from replacement Roof repair scope capped at membrane maintenance, with structural replacement assigned to the landlord A per-square-foot annual NNN maintenance cap for triple net transactions An explicit list of capital repairs that remain the landlord’s obligation, regardless of lease type Dean CRE’s leasing and brokerage team in Huntsville structures repair and maintenance protections into LOI language before the lease draft stage — so tenants do not negotiate these points against a completed document. Tenants who engage a tenant advisor before the LOI consistently secure better maintenance terms than those who rely solely on lease redlines. What to Look for in the Maintenance Article of Any Commercial Lease Before executing any Alabama commercial lease, a tenant should confirm the 5 clauses worth reviewing in the maintenance and repair article: HVAC responsibility is assigned to a named party for both maintenance and replacement Roof obligations are defined by scope — membrane, structure, or both Plumbing responsibility distinguishes interior from exterior systems A dollar threshold or age cap limits tenant exposure on capital systems Landlord repair obligations carry a response timeline, so delays do not leave the tenant operating in a degraded facility Reviewing effective leasing strategies for the North Alabama market before entering negotiations gives tenants a checklist framework for every repair clause. Contact Us Today For An Appointment [contact-form-7] Frequently Asked Questions Who pays for HVAC repairs in a triple net lease in Alabama? The tenant pays for HVAC maintenance and repair under a triple-net lease in Alabama, including full unit replacement unless the lease includes an age cap or a dollar threshold that shifts replacement costs to the landlord. Tenants should negotiate this distinction explicitly at the LOI stage before any NNN lease is executed. Does Alabama law say who is responsible for commercial building repairs? Alabama imposes no statutory default allocating repair responsibility between commercial landlords and tenants. Alabama Code Title 35 governs property law but defers to contract terms for commercial transactions. The lease document controls repair obligations entirely, making pre-execution review the only reliable protection for Alabama commercial tenants. What is a NNN maintenance cap, and do I need one in Huntsville? An NNN maintenance cap limits a tenant’s annual out-of-pocket repair obligation to a defined per-square-foot amount, with the landlord absorbing any costs above that threshold. Cap structures vary by property and negotiation. Any tenant signing a NNN lease on second-generation commercial space in Huntsville should negotiate one before execution. Who pays for roof replacement in a commercial lease in Alabama? Lease type controls roof replacement responsibility in Alabama. NNN tenants typically bear roof replacement costs unless a carve-out assigns structural replacement to the landlord. Modified gross and full-service gross leases assign roof replacement to the landlord in most professionally drafted Alabama commercial leases. Tenants should confirm the scope in writing. Is the landlord responsible for plumbing repairs in a commercial lease? Landlords are typically responsible for exterior and main-line plumbing in Alabama commercial leases, regardless of lease type. Interior plumbing within the leased premises is the tenant’s obligation in NNN and modified gross leases. Full-service gross leases assign all plumbing repair to the landlord as part of the operating cost bundle. What repairs is a commercial landlord always responsible for in Alabama? Structural repairs — foundation, load-bearing walls, and building envelope — are assigned to the landlord in nearly all Alabama commercial leases regardless of lease type. Exterior main-line plumbing and the building’s primary electrical service are also typically landlord obligations. A landlord who refuses to make structural repairs that create unsafe conditions may face a constructive eviction claim under Alabama law. Can a tenant negotiate repair obligations in a Huntsville commercial lease? Yes. Repair and maintenance obligations are negotiable in every Alabama commercial lease, and the most effective window is the letter of intent stage before the lease is drafted. Tenants can negotiate HVAC age caps, roof replacement carve-outs, NNN maintenance caps, and capital repair definitions — all of which reduce maintenance exposure over a 5- to 10-year term. What is the difference between CAM charges and NNN maintenance obligations? CAM charges cover shared area costs — parking lots, lobbies, and landscaping — allocated across all tenants in a multi-tenant building. NNN maintenance obligations cover the tenant’s exclusive space and building systems. Tenants who conflate CAM and NNN obligations frequently underfund maintenance reserves and face unexpected end-of-lease restoration demands. Repair exposure you didn’t budget for starts with lease language you didn’t catch before signing. Dean CRE’s tenant advisory team negotiates maintenance caps, HVAC age protections, and roof carve-outs into every Huntsville lease — before you’re locked in.
"Huntsville Housing Authority is submitting the following draft of the Capital Fund 2026-2030 Five Year Action Plan for public comment. Copies of the draft plan are in the pdf linked below. This submission begins the 45 day public comment period before Huntsville Housing Authority will finalize changes and present the 2026-2030 Five Year Action Plan to the HHA Board of Commissioners. Huntsville Housing Authority will host two opportunities for the public to discuss the proposed plans: Thursday, July 23, 2026, Resident Advisory Board Meeting at 11:00am located at 2201 Clinton Ave W, Huntsville, AL 35805; and Thursday, July 23, 2026, Public Hearing at 6:00pm located at HHA’s Central Office, 200 Washington St NE, Huntsville, AL 35801. Please email any questions or comments to Erik Hyska at [email protected]. All emailed questions and comments will be answered in writing and at the public hearing on July 23, 2026. HHA Capital Fund 2026-2030 Five Year Action Plan DRAFTDownloadThe post Capital Fund Draft Plan 2026-2030 (Draft) first appeared on Huntsville Housing Authority."
"The Huntsville Music Office is excited to announce the return of Make Music Day Huntsville on Sunday, June 21, a community-driven celebration of music that invites everyone of all ages, backgrounds and skill levels to participate. Make Music Day Huntsville is part of the global Make Music Day initiative, held annually in more than 1,000 cities across 120 countries. This free, all-ages, all-inclusive event is hosted by the Huntsville Music Office and the Huntsville Hospital Music Therapy Program and is open to anyone who wants to participate. New registration process for 2026 This year also introduces a new, simplified registration system for those wishing to host or perform. The updated process is designed to make participation easier, more accessible and more flexible for venues, businesses, community groups and individual musicians. And because Make Music Day falls on a Sunday this year, Huntsville is hoping for its biggest celebration yet. “Make Music Day being on a Sunday this year will hopefully lend to more people having an opportunity to participate and really pack the schedule with free music performances throughout the community in celebration,” Mandrella said. “We’re inviting musicians, businesses, artists and neighborhoods to join in and help create a full day of sound across the city.” All Make Music Day activities are free and open to the public. Venues and performers register by June 19 The deadline to add your performances or ones you’re hosting to the Make Music Day website’s schedule of events is Friday, June 19. To learn more about how to participate in Make Music Day Huntsville, visit the Make Music Day Huntsville webpage. Huntsville Hospital launches ‘Make Music Week’ Make Music Day Huntsville is also a platform to bring more awareness to the depth of work that music therapists provide for patients and families, including the many ways music can help reduce anxiety, manage stress, support coping and promote healing during hospitalization. The Huntsville Hospital Music Therapy Program will host a series of “Make Music Week” events across several hospital campuses leading up to Make Music Day. “This year, our Music Therapy Program is proudly celebrating Make Music Day with a full week of music,” said Mae McLaughlin, music therapist at Huntsville Hospital for Women & Children. “From June 15-19, patients, families, visitors and staff can enjoy the healing sounds of community musicians in common areas throughout Huntsville Hospital, Huntsville Hospital for Women & Children, and Madison Hospital.” Additionally, Huntsville Hospital’s Arts in Medicine Program partnered with the Cigar Box Guitar Store at Lowe Mill for an art exhibit and fundraiser. The guitars were displayed at Huntsville Hospital and Lowe Mill during the 22nd Annual Cigar Box Guitar Festival. A portion of the proceeds from the fundraiser was donated to the Huntsville Hospital Music Therapy Program. Although the fundraiser has ended, the Arts in Medicine Program has created a virtual tour of the CBGS Gallery Collection that can be viewed online through the Arts in Medicine webpage. To learn more, visit the Huntsville Hospital Music Therapy program webpage. The post Huntsville Music Office, Huntsville Hospital invite community to Make Music Day 2026 appeared first on City of Huntsville."
" Local News Traffic delays expected as Huntsville water main work shuts down part of Brandon Town Road Huntsville Utilities will close part of Brandon Town Road on Tuesday morning for water main work, causing temporary detours; drivers should find alternate routes. Credit: Huntsville Utilities Author: Austin Pylant Published: 7:02 AM CDT June 2, 2026 Updated: 7:02 AM CDT June 2, 2026 HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Huntsville Utilities will close a portion of Brandon Town Road on Tuesday morning for scheduled water main installation work, prompting a temporary traffic detour in the area. At 8 a.m., Huntsville Utilities Water Operations will close Brandon Town Road at the intersection with Motley Road. Officials say the closure is expected to last four to six hours while crews complete the installation. Motorists are being urged to avoid the area if possible and use alternate routes to reduce delays. More in Local Florence City Council set to vote to advance new city hall project Huntsville City Council President Jennie Robinson describes what it takes to pave major streets More than 60 Huntsville streets set for resurfacing in 2026 roadwork plan Close Ad { "@context": "http://schema.org", "@type": "NewsArticle", "headline": "Traffic delays expected as Huntsville water main work shuts down part of Brandon Town Road", "datePublished": "7:02 AM CDT June 2, 2026", "dateModified": "7:02 AM CDT June 2, 2026", "mainEntityOfPage": { "@type": "WebPage", "@id": "https://www.rocketcitynow.com/article/news/local/traffic-delays-expected-huntsville-water-main-work-shuts-down-brandon-town-road/525-ab0a8736-d1ee-45ba-8bc4-fd7768661479" }, "author": { "@type": "Person", "name": "Austin Pylant" }, "publisher": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "WZDX", "logo": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://www.rocketcitynow.com/assets/shared-images/logos/amp/wzdx.png", "width": 340, "height": 60 } }, "image": null } "
"The City of Huntsville is inviting residents from across the community to come together in downtown Huntsville on Saturday, July 4, for a full day of patriotic, family‑friendly fun as part of Huntsville’s America 250 celebration. This year’s Independence Day event presented by Meta promises music, history, food, fireworks and a once‑in‑a‑lifetime celebration of our nation’s 250th anniversary. Mayor Tommy Battle said the vision for the celebration began a year ago when the Huntsville Salutes America’s 250th Committee was formed. “When we established the Committee, we knew from the very beginning that our commemoration of this historic milestone had to culminate in something truly special,” Mayor Battle said. “Huntsville needed a July 4th celebration that matched the significance of the moment—a celebration worthy of our community, our history and our future.” Residents will have the unique opportunity to celebrate Independence Day in Big Spring Park in 2026, and organizers have prepared a schedule packed with activities for all ages: 4 p.m. – Vendor market, food trucks, DJ, historical reenactments and educational experiences 5 p.m. – American Eras Parade, beginning on Monroe Street, sharing a moving storyline of American history 6 p.m. – Live music in the park featuring Groove, followed by Huntsville’s own Jazz McKenzie and her 10‑piece band 9 p.m. – A spectacular 25‑minute fireworks finale accompanied by the Huntsville Concert Band The parade will also be broadcast live on WHNT19 and streamed by partner stations across Alabama and Georgia. July 4th Celebration Committee Chair Natasha J. Parker encouraged families to make the event part of their holiday tradition. “We’ve built a lineup that offers something for everyone,” Parker said. “We encourage everyone to join us—bring a picnic, visit the food trucks, pack your chairs and blankets, and settle in for a celebration you’ll never forget.” The July 4th festivities are a signature part of Huntsville’s America 250 programming, a months‑long lineup of events, concerts, educational opportunities and cultural activities leading up to the nation’s 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Joining the citywide celebration lineup of official America 250 events is Rocket City Space Fest on July 16-20, an event highlighting Huntsville’s role in American space exploration. Festival Chair Ralph Petroff shared his excitement for the event. “Rocket City Space Fest will shine a national spotlight on Huntsville’s central role in one of America’s greatest achievements – getting humanity to the Moon — and the City’s continued leadership in shaping the future of space exploration,” Petroff said. “Launching this July as the ‘after-party’ for America’s 250th anniversary celebration, the Festival will grow into an annual tradition celebrating Huntsville’s unmatched space legacy through community events, inspiration, and discovery.” For more information and a full list of events, visit America250Huntsville.org. The post City invites residents to a full day of July 4th festivities in downtown Huntsville appeared first on City of Huntsville."
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