Jan. 23, 2024
Nothing is ever black and white on Capitol Hill — not even red lights and stop signs. House Bill 978, the latest exception-to-the-rule legislation, was introduced today, allowing bicyclists approaching a stop sign to “act in accordance with the requirements for approaching a yield sign.” Combined with the recent attempt across the street in Atlanta City Hall to abolish the beloved practice of turning right on a red light, it seems that the traffic control lobby has their work cut out for them this year. The #GoldDomeReport will let you know if they are successful in stopping the measures in their tracks.
In more serious news, Governor Brian Kemp and Japanese Consul General Mio Maeda celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Japanese Consulate in Atlanta on Tuesday. The Legislative Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Caucus also announced that it will host Lunar New Year Day at the State Capitol on Thursday, Feb. 15. Both celebrations acknowledge Georgia’s vibrant and growing AAPI community.
Senate Education & Youth Committee
The Senate Education & Youth Committee, chaired by Senator Clint Dixon (R-Gwinnett), met on Tuesday to consider four measures, all of which passed out of the committee during the 2023 legislative session:
Senate Children & Families Committee
The Senate Children & Families Committee, chaired by Senator Kay Kirkpatrick (R-Marietta), met on Tuesday to consider one measure:
House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee
Chairman Tyler Paul Smith (R-Bremen) called the House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee to order on Monday to discuss one bill:
Forsyth County Solicitor General Bill Finch asked that solicitor generals be removed from the scope.
The measure passed along party lines.
Senate Judiciary Committee
The Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by Senator Brian Strickland (R-McDonough), was called to order on Monday afternoon to discuss two measures:
Sarah Bunt-Blackwell with the Georgia ACLU, Megan Gordon at the Council on American Islam Relations, Professor Ilse Cohen from the Religious Studies Department for Jewish Studies, Marisa Pyle, Sig Giordano, Julia Falcone, Luma Eunich, Asim Javed from the Georgia Muslim Voter Project, Nadia Behizadeh a professor of Adolescent Literacy, Karem Rosshandler, and Dr. Jill Werner from Conscious Anti-Racism expressed concern over the measure.
Mark Goldfeder from the National Jewish Advocacy Center, Eric Robbins from the Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta, Sally Levine from the Georgia Commission on the Holocaust, Pasto George Morrison from Christians United for Israel, Darius Jones from the National Black Empowerment Council, Rabbi Chaim Neiditch from the Jewish Student Union, Julie Katz with the American Jewish Communities, Rabbi Elizabeth Bayer, Mack Parnell from the Georgia Faith and Freedom Coalition, Beth and Erin Gahn, David Lubin, and Rabbi Larry Sernovitz expressed their support for the measure.
The committee substitute received a DO PASS recommendation.
SB 359, authored by Senator John Albers (R-Roswell), amends O.C.G.A. 16-14-3 relating to hate crimes. The substitute adds to the definition of a pattern of racketeering activity and designated misdemeanor to Georgia’s RICO Act and Hate Crimes Laws. The measure includes changes for anyone committing, attempting to commit, soliciting, or coercing someone to commit a hate crime can be charged with racketeering. Under Georgia’s Hate Crimes Law, it further adds to designated misdemeanor anyone littering, unlawfully posting, disorderly conduct at a funeral or memorial service, terroristic threats, and harassing communication and also adds political affiliation or belief to the list of groups.
A representative from the ACLU and citizens from the city of Atlanta expressed opposition to the measure.
A motion DO PASS was made. An amendment was accepted to replace “chargeable by indictment” with “(b)(2)(a)”. The measure passed as amended by a vote of 5 to 3.
House Appropriations Human Services Subcommittee
Chair Katie Dempsey (R-Rome) called the Human Services Subcommittee to order Monday afternoon to hear presentations from state agencies and departments on the Amended Fiscal Year 2024.
Representative Mary Margaret Oliver (D-Decatur) asked about EMPATH Units. Representative Karen Mathiak (R-Griffin) asked about the age of their software. In the hospital setting, it is not very old. Within the provider base, there are a lot of systems that do not coordinate and communicate. Representative Mike Cameron (R-Rossville) asked if there is staff that reaches out to sheriffs. The department does and attends the various conferences. Representative Emory Dunahoo (R-Gillsville) asked about the average stay for those in forensic beds, and after that stay. The stay is nine years, and after they are considered mentally fit, they are able to live in a supervised environment. He further asked about the number of employees in Cobb. Since they are a provider, this is a contract with the county, so technically, there are no DBHDD employees. Chair Dempsey asked about the bed study. The study showed Georgia needs eight crisis centers over the next ten years. A crisis center allows someone to go for ten days instead of a state hospital for longer stays. This same study showed the need for 119 forensic beds. Dempsey asked about housing vouchers. The voucher program continues to grow and needs more money. Dempsey wanted the commissioner to explain why the state cannot build a new state hospital. The state is required to care for people in their community. The needs of the state are really for forensic beds. Commissioner Tanner was asked about the opioid settlement. An inventory of treatment has been done, and now they are working on the perfect continuum of care. Currently, the department is working on a portal along with the local communities developing their regional advisory councils. Dempsey asked about the 988 Hotline. Georgia has done a tremendous job, which was developed with GCAL prior to 988. The department has worked with restaurant workers, which is the second-highest demographic group to commit suicide, to reduce the stigma.
Representative Steven Sainz (R-St. Marys) asked about the reduction in elder abuse and prevention. This reduction is because of the ombudsmen's work. Representative Cameron asked about his county's office being opening less than five days a week. This is a staffing issue. Representative Oliver inquired about the gap in caseworkers. There are a few hundred unfunded vacancies. Dempsey asked about case management system updates.
Representative Sainz asked what the makeup of the foundation and their assets were. There were seven members appointed last year. They only have $12,500 but haven’t fundraised for it. Representative Cameron asked if homelessness is being tackled in his area with the use of tiny homes. They are using containers and trying to co-locate services with those veterans, but they are not conducive to families. Representative Mathiak thanked the commissioner for helping with her 102-year-old veteran. Chair Dempsey asked about the cemeteries. The number of burials per year is about 600. More veterans have applied under PACK Act claims.
Representative Anulewicz asked about IPSE grants. The agency supports the grants and could have more funding. Representative Sainz requested a description of residential campuses. Campuses have changed. The agency has partnered with rural schools to offer additional tutoring.
House Appropriations Economic Development Subcommittee
Representative Steven Meeks (R-Screven) chaired Tuesday’s subcommittee meeting.
Representative Steve Tarvin (R-Chickamauga) asked about inspectors that do not have vehicles. Roughly 10 inspectors meet the criteria.
Representative Meeks asked if that was the max that could be drawn down. Nunn explained it was. Meeks asked about the cost of those 74 grants. It is around $450-460 million in grants. This includes the five big projects in previous budgets. Representative Mack Jackson (D-Sandersville) asked for more information on the Edge Program. It is an award program that provides incentives for infrastructure, site and land development. Meeks asked how sites are marketed. In coordination with the Department of Economic Development, the order in which a business chooses undeveloped or developed sites varies. It requires local involvement and preparation.
Representative Gerald Greene (R-Cuthbert) wanted to discuss the art collection further and create a new facility to house them. Greene asked if there were private funds to offset the cost. Marshall Guest from Metro Atlanta Chamber would provide more information. Representative Josh Bonner (R-Fayetteville) asked if the state owned the caldron. Meeks asked about mileage on current vehicles and exporting Georgia goods. Current vehicles are about 75,000 miles. Contracts written in the line item are offices in other countries to develop markets.
Representative Greene asked if industries' headquarters in Georgia are of concern for energy consumption. Shaw explained there is more capacity with Vogtle, but since the last one in 2022, the load forecast is expected to grow, particularly with artificial intelligence. Meeks asked about data centers and the rate of growth. There is a timeline for these projects to come online and compare them with the load expectation. It is expected to have capacity in 2028. Georgia is the number seventh state for solar.
The following new legislation of interest has been introduced in the House:
H.B.955 |
Georgia Equity and Fairness Commission Act; enact |
Rep. Roger Bruce (D-061) |
|
H.B.960 |
Houston Judicial Circuit; provide for fourth judge |
Rep. Shaw Blackmon (R-146) |
|
H.B.962 |
Transparency and Accountability in Asset Forfeiture Act; enact |
Rep. Sandra Scott (D-076) |
|
H.B.963 |
Georgia K-5 Social and Emotional Health Act; enact |
Rep. Sandra Scott (D-076) |
|
H.B.964 |
Inclusive Public Service Act; enact |
Rep. Sandra Scott (D-076) |
|
H.B.967 |
Magistrate courts; increase amount of court claims from $15,000.00 to $50,000.00 |
Rep. Martin Momtahan (R-017) |
|
H.B.968 |
Georgia Child Performer Empowerment and Protection Act; enact |
Rep. Kim Schofield (D-063) |
|
H.B.970 |
Realizing Educational Achievement Can Happen (REACH) Scholarship; victims of human trafficking are eligible; provide |
Rep. Robert Dickey (R-145) |
|
H.B.978 |
Uniform rules of the road; operators of bicycles to treat stop signs as yield signs; authorize |
Rep. Todd Jones (R-025) |
|
H.B.980 |
Employee Empowerment and Transparency Act; enact |
Rep. Kim Schofield (D-063) |
|
H.B.982 |
State Workforce Development Board; publish a High-demand Career List most critical to the state's current and future workforce needs; require |
Rep. Matthew Gambill (R-015) |
|
H.B.983 |
Prosecuting Attorneys Qualification Commission; repeal and reserve Code Section 15-18-32 |
Rep. Sandra Scott (D-076) |
|
H.B.984 |
Insurance, Department of; Office of the Safety Fire Commissioner; update practices |
Rep. Eddie Lumsden (R-012) |
|
H.B.986 |
Elections; election interference with a deep fake; establish criminal offense |
Rep. Brad Thomas (R-021) |
|
H.B.987 |
Education; grants; revise definition of qualified local school system school by reducing the minimum required millage rate or equivalent millage rate from 14 mills to 10 mills |
Rep. Chas Cannon (R-172) |
|
H.B.990 |
Evidence; creative and artistic expression evidence is inadmissible at trial; provide |
Rep. Eric Bell (D-075) |
|
H.R.807 |
State goal of 100 percent clean energy by 2050; support |
Rep. Kim Schofield (D-063) |
|
H.R.808 |
Congress; allow certain benefits to be used for purchasing menstrual products; urge |
Rep. Kim Schofield (D-063) |
|
H.R.809 |
State Workgroup to Increase Chronic Disease Information and Screenings in Communities of Color; support creation |
Rep. Kim Schofield (D-063) |
|
H.R.831 |
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and its Georgia chapter; commend |
Rep. James Burchett (R-176) |
The following new legislation of interest has been introduced in the Senate:
S.B.362 |
State Government; employee representation by a labor organization for employers to receive certain economic development incentives from the state; provide requirements |
Sen. Mike Hodges (R-003) |
|
S.B.363 |
Georgia Public Safety Training Center law enforcement unit; establishment; provide |
Sen. John Albers (R-056) |
|
S.B.364 |
"Property Tax Relief Act of 2024"; enact |
Sen. John Albers (R-056) |
|
S.B.365 |
Education; notification to parents and legal guardians of public school students of the right to receive email notification each time their child obtains school library materials; provide |
Sen. Greg Dolezal (R-027) |
|
S.B.366 |
"Tax Expenditures Transparency Act of 2024"; enact |
Sen. Chuck Hufstetler (R-052) |
|
S.B.370 |
Human Trafficking Hotline Information; certain establishments to post human trafficking hotline information; require |
Sen. Mike Hodges (R-003) |
|
S.B.372 |
Sales and Use Taxes; certain goods designed and customarily used for child-rearing; exempt |
||
S.R.450 |
Georgia Speech-Language-Hearing Association; recognize |
Sen. Ben Watson (R-001) |
|
S.R.456 |
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention; recognize |
Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick (R-032) |
|
S.R.465 |
Senate Special Committee on Investigations; create |
Sen. Greg Dolezal (R-027) |
The General Assembly will reconvene for Legislative Day 8 on Wednesday, Jan. 24 at 10 a.m.
The Senate is expected to take up the following measures on Legislative Day 8:
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