Huntsville Bail Fund

Huntsville Bail Fund Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Huntsville Bail Fund, Community Organization, Huntsville, AL.

Huntsville Bail Fund is a 501(c)3 organization that seeks to address the disproportionate impact of the cash bail system on vulnerable populations in Madison County, by providing cash bail assistance and limited reentry services.

It's not too late to register for our community research project! Registration deadline has been extended to March 2, 20...
02/13/2026

It's not too late to register for our community research project! Registration deadline has been extended to March 2, 2026.

Have you been jailed for a violation or misdemeanor in Huntsville, AL? You may be eligible to participate in our community research project. Our goal is to advocate for policies that reduce arrests and build more just systems of safety in our community. If you are eligible, you will be invited to participate in an hour and a half long interview and in return will be compensated with a $100 gift card.

Visit hsvbailfund.org/survey to register!

Have you been jailed for a violation or misdemeanor in Huntsville, AL? You may be eligible to participate in our communi...
12/30/2025

Have you been jailed for a violation or misdemeanor in Huntsville, AL? You may be eligible to participate in our community research project. Our goal is to advocate for policies that reduce arrests and build more just systems of safety in our community. If you are eligible, you will be invited to participate in an hour and a half long interview and in return will be compensated with a $100 gift card. Visit hsvbailfund.org/survey to register! Registration is open until Monday, February 16, 2026.

12/08/2025

HOW PEOPLE ON THE OUTSIDE CAN SUPPORT THE POLITICAL WORK OF PEOPLE ON THE INSIDE

By Stephen Wilson, imprisoned in Pennsylvania.
written December 14, 2018

"Here are 10 things they can do for us:

1. Organize and struggle with us, but allow us to be the authorities on our own experiences.

2. Don’t speak for us. We can speak. When we cannot, due to repression or threats from prison officials, use your freedom and privilege to amplify our voices and advance our issues.

3. Be accomplices. Put yourselves out there for us. Attend rallies and speak out against the PIC. Organize call-ins to prisons. Show up at courthouses. Disrupt. Disrupt. Disrupt the PIC.

4. Whenever you organize, strategize, or confer, make your spaces inclusive and accessible. Take note of who’s missing. Find them, invite them, and include them. If they don’t come to you, go to them. Often, those who are missing are our families and our friends.

5. Remember, we don’t have Internet access. The latest news is not just a click away for us. Create offline publications (newsletters, magazines, journals, letters) to keep us informed and educated. Provide platforms for our voices.

6. Employ an intersectional analysis. Identity does not equal experience. We are all prisoners, but we experience imprisonment differently. The experiences of an able-bodied, straight, cisgender male is very different from those of a trans/queer, disabled woman of color. Many of us struggle under multiple oppressive structures, but prevalent ideas of prison center upon able-bodied, straight, cisgender males. Broaden your understanding of who is affected by the PIC and how.

7. Financially support activists behind the walls. Everything costs money in prison. Many know how the PIC extorts us and our families. In Pennsylvania, prisoners make about $0.19 an hour (4 to 6-hourshifts, 5 days a week). A bar of soap costs $0.85. For many prisoners, a day’s wages won’t buy a bar of soap. So how can we afford books, journals, writing supplies or postage? Sending a letter costs 3 hours’ wages! A little support goes a long way. If inside activists’ views and ideas are to be included, if our experiences are to be centered, you have to support our efforts at studying, organizing, and communicating with you.

8. Learn what really happens in here. Don’t assume. Oftentimes, reforms are pushed, and their ultimate results adversely affect prisoners. The PIC is adept at morphing demands for reform into measures that further oppress prisoners. Before and after campaigns and initiatives, solicit the views and experiences of prisoners.

9. Join us in advancing issues that truly create safe communities. For example: increased school funding, community mental health clinics, universal health insurance, living wages, community substance and alcohol treatment programs, transformative justice programs, decarceration and decriminalization efforts. This way, when we are released we’ll have less chance of returning to prison.

10. Take care of yourselves. We need you. This fight is for the long term. We need you struggling alongside us and our families for the duration. Create and find joy in the struggle. Find time and space to rejuvenate and recalibrate. Be good to yourselves. Breathe."

12/08/2025

THE HOLIDAY HOLLA!!!
To honor Ella Baker’s legacy, UWOC and Lakeside UMC-Huntsville, Al is bringing the community together for a powerful day of practical safety and collective care.

This FREE event will feature:
• A hands-on de-escalation training led by an experienced instructor
• A grounded, real-talk safety outlook from local Black security professionals
• Free 3-day emergency preparedness survival kits for every participant

While anyone who believes in our mission is welcome, we’re preparing for 50–60 Black and Brown community members to join us. Light refreshments will be provided.
Location TBD

To volunteer or attend sign up here:
https://actionnetwork.org/forms/holiday-holla-ella-baker-safety-skill-training-interest-form

12/08/2025

We are grateful and proud of our UUCH community! On Dec 6, we distibuted $12K worth of food to 125 families. This included eggs thanks to a generous friend donation. Special thanks to our Caring Committee and Melodie Ruth Brier.

11/20/2025

A bright light should still be with us.

We are mourning the loss of Girlalala, a 21 year old Black transgender woman whose life was taken far too soon. She was a creator and a storyteller whose humor, talent, and courage touched hundreds of thousands of people. Our hearts are with her family and everyone who loved her.

Her death comes during Transgender Awareness Week, a time when our community is already grieving. It is another painful reminder of why protecting Black trans people is urgent and necessary.

As our Director of Public Policy and Programs Victoria Kirby York shared, “It is absolutely devastating to learn about the loss of Girlalala. She was the first transgender person many met through TikTok and likely saved lives by helping people find the words for their own journeys. Her murder is a somber reminder of why building our collective power and investing in the safety of Black trans people is essential.”

We honor her life. We speak her name. We continue the work to protect our Black trans family.

Among those that lost their lives in Alabama are Cam Thompson, 18 years old and from Tuscaloosa, and Kaitoria Bankz, 31 ...
11/20/2025

Among those that lost their lives in Alabama are Cam Thompson, 18 years old and from Tuscaloosa, and Kaitoria Bankz, 31 years old from Autaugaville Alabama and a staff member of the Knights and Orchids Society.

https://transequality.org/sites/default/files/2025-11/Trans%20Day%20of%20Remembrance%202025_A4TE%20Remembrance%20Report.pdf

https://www.transremembrance.org/insights-and-data

"The 2025 Remembrance Report honors the fifty-eight known trans people who have died since November 2024.  Twenty-seven ...
11/20/2025

"The 2025 Remembrance Report honors the fifty-eight known trans people who have died since November 2024. Twenty-seven were lost to violence and twenty-one to su***de. The report also honors eight trans people who passed from natural causes. The data in this report has been compiled from a variety of sources, including national and local news outlets; national, state, and local LGBTQI+ organizations; and volunteer-led community efforts."

https://transequality.org/news/a4te-releases-2025-trans-day-remembrance-report

11/20/2025

Tonight's video stream of City Council will be cancelled due to technical difficulties. Sorry for the inconvenience.

11/20/2025

Address

Huntsville, AL
35801

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Huntsville Bail Fund posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Huntsville Bail Fund:

Share