Foley Celebrates Progress in 2024 State of the City Address

Guy Busby • December 24, 2024

Major Projects Aim to Improve Infrastructure and Safety

Gulf Shores area News

Foley has several major projects planned for the coming year, including the construction of a new library center and the completion of the Public Works campus. During his annual State of the City presentation on December 12th at the South Baldwin Chamber’s luncheon, Mayor Ralph Hellmich highlighted the city's significant accomplishments over the past year and outlined plans for future initiatives. He announced that construction on the new library is set to begin next month, as project bids came in under budget.


“We'll start construction in January,” Hellmich said. “We're very proud of this library community center. It is very modern. It's going to be twice the size of our current facility.”


Work continues on the complex that will house Foley’s Public Works and Sanitation Department. That facility is scheduled to open in 2025. Moving Public Works will free space at the department’s current facility for other offices.


“We believe that by mid-summer, we'll be able to move Public Works,” Hellmich said. “Once Public Works gets moved that frees up the space where we can then move our Parks and Recreation.”


Foley will continue to improve roads and sidewalks around the city. In the last year, the city opened the South Juniper Street extension, which allows traffic to move between U.S. 98 and Baldwin County 20 without having to use Alabama 59 or the Foley Beach Express.


The city is also improving intersections. Hellmich said much of the local congestion is due to traffic at intersections as millions of vehicles move through the city each year.

“Our roads are not the problem,” Hellmich said. “It's the intersections that cause the glitch.” 


Foley and the Alabama Department of Transportation are coordinating light signals at intersections through the city.


The city is also spending more than $1 million each year to maintain existing roads.


“We do about $1 million and in some years we do more in repaving. So those projects will generally be between $1 million to $1.5 million. That's just to maintain the quality of our road structure. We did an engineering study of our road structure. Normally, if you grade above 80 that means your roads are well maintained. We grade at about 87, so we have good roads with very few potholes. Our job is to make sure that number doesn't drop.”


Foley is improving pedestrian travel around the city. The city spent about $1 million in the last year on sidewalk construction and has budgeted another $1 million for the current year.


The city installed a solar-powered crosswalk signal on North Pecan Street and plans to add more.


“You'll start seeing the solar powered pushbutton crosswalk, where you have mid-block crossings on busy roads that will allow for better pedestrian safety,” Hellmich said. “Technology has improved to the point where these signs are affordable now.”


Foley is also extending East Jessamine Avenue to link Heritage Park with the area near City Hall and making improvements on the east side of Heritage Park.


Extensions are also in the works for Bullard Street and Pilgrim Street in the Beulah Heights community. 


Work is almost complete to widen and add shoulders along the Foley Beach Express. Foley and the state have agreed that the city will transfer the highway to ALDOT when that project is finished in upcoming weeks.


The city opened the new restroom facilities at Heritage Park earlier this month.

More park improvements are also planned around Foley. The city is building a new park in the Mills Community and is developing plans for recreational improvements, such as the pickleball and sand volleyball courts under construction near the Coastal Alabama Farmers and Fishermens Market.


Other accomplishments include the purchase of a World War II Navy training aircraft to continue the city’s work to educate the public about Foley’s role in training aviators during the war. The National Park Service designated Foley as an American World War II Heritage City. The city opened a museum exhibit commemorating the designation and the Navy training center at Barin Field that opened in 1942.


Downtown improvements are also moving forward. Hellmich said the Foley Main Street downtown improvement group opened the Cat Alley walkway area in November and more than 20 businesses have located in downtown Foley in the last year.


Foley now has a downtown Arts and Entertainment District. The entertainment district will bring more business and activity to downtown in order to enhance community engagement and cultural activities.


The district opened in November as part of the continuing work to improve and revitalize the city’s historic downtown. 


“I’m very proud of what they’ve done and of our council for creating the Main Street program several years ago,” Hellmich said. 


Four pillars guide city planning and development. 


“This is what we concentrate on. Everything fits within these guidelines – public safety, education, infrastructure and quality of life. Each are equally important,” Hellmich said. “Each has projects and support that we can do, and we are working in every one of those facets.”


The mayor said Foley is expanding the police and fire departments to meet the growing needs of the city.


“We're going to keep supporting our first responders,” Hellmich said.


 The city approved hiring six additional firefighters and expanding the size of the Police Department to 75 positions.


To support education, the city created the Foley Enhanced Education Committee. The City Council agreed to provide $250,000 to support education in the Foley school feeder pattern.


Hellmich said Foley is one of the fastest growing cities in the state and that growth is expected to continue.


We're moving forward,” he said. “We are known as the Forward City and we're going to keep being that. We're going to keep taking it forward.”


  • gulf shores news

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • news in gulf shores

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • port at zekes

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • saunders marine gulf shores

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • yabbas snack shack

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • freedom boat club orange beach

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button
  • buzzcatz coffee

    Slide title

    Write your caption here
    Button

Recent Posts

visions of Christmas orange beach
By Ken Cooper October 30, 2025
The popular Visions of Christmas variety show is coming back to the Orange Beach Performing Arts Center for its fifth season. The community holiday production promises to bring entertainment and seasonal cheer to audiences of all ages.
end of daylight savings
By Gulf Shores News Staff October 30, 2025
Daylight Saving Time will end this Sunday, giving residents across most of the United States an extra hour of sleep. Clocks will fall back one hour at 2:00 a.m., marking the return to standard time. The change means earlier sunsets and darker evenings for the coming months.
Flora Bama Makes Southern Livings Best Dive Bar List
By Gulf Shores News Staff October 29, 2025
Have you ever heard of the Nowhere Bar in Athens, Georgia? Maybe you have driven by the No Name Pub in Pine Key, Florida. The Editors of Southern Living magazine picked their favorite southern dive bars and the legendary Flora-Bama made the list.
Show More