After a community is affected by an opioid overdose, an expanded program from Georgia’s Department of Public Health will send recovery and harm reduction advocates door-knocking in the neighborhood nearby.
With city leaders still negotiating a severance package with Police Chief Freddie Blackmon, Columbus Council has called a special meeting for Thursday at 3 p.m.
An outside report looking into how law enforcement agencies responded to a shooting hoax at Savannah High School last year found several problems including major communications failures.
The police chief in Columbus is threatening to sue the city for racial discrimination.
Vice President Kamala Harris is coming to Dalton today to tout the white house's plans for green energy.
The 2023 Masters Tournament begins today and fans from all over have arrived in Augusta, many of those via airplane
On the Wednesday, April 5 edition of GeorgiaToday: Vice President Harris is headed to Georgia; there's new data on the world's busiest airport; and big crowds gather in Augusta for The Masters golf tournament.
Wednesday on Political Rewind: While Donald Trump was being arraigned, Georgia's Marjorie Taylor Greene was forced away from a rally she planned to lead. The former president would later address the public from his Mar-a-Lago home.
Plus, Gov. Brian Kemp vetoes his first bill of the year.
Tiger Woods is at the Masters for the 25th time, but not even he knows how much longer he will keep playing. Woods brings a degree a normalcy to this Masters that is filled with chatter and speculation about LIV Golf.
Some Georgia Republicans have rushed to defend former President Donald Trump following his arraignment on 34 felony counts in a Manhattan courtroom Tuesday.
Georgia health departments are reminding people to make sure they’re still eligible for Medicaid ahead of statewide redeterminations later this month.
A cornerstone of services for the homeless in Macon is celebrating a record fundraising effort.
In February, Georgia lawmaker Josh Bonner introduced a bill that he hoped would fix a thorny problem that entangles tens of thousands of state residents in debt each year.
“I wondered, ‘How can this be legal, and who wouldn’t want some common-sense reform?’” Bonner recalled.