Dozens of bills passed either the state House or the state Senate yesterday on Crossover Day.
Georgia’s Public Service Commission is in the midst of the final public hearings on Georgia Power’s request to vastly expand its ability to make electricity in response to what the utility says is unprecedented business growth.
Today is Crossover Day, a key deadline in the Georgia General Assembly when legislation has to pass either the House or Senate to be considered by the other chamber before the end of this session.
Georgia Democrats are hoping to pass legislation protecting in vitro fertilization or IVF after an Alabama supreme court decision that threatens the legality of the infertility treatment.
Today is February 29th, a day that comes around only once every four-years.
Civil rights attorneys filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday in south Georgia, alleging excessive and unlawful use of force in the police killing of Leonard Cure.
State Senate Minority Leader, Gloria Butler, announced Tuesday that she will retire at the end of the year.
Georgians may be one step closer to gambling legally.
A Georgia nonprofit has organized a series of litter cleanups of coastal Glynn County’s salt marshes for the month of March.
Hundreds of students and faculty members gathered Monday afternoon on the University of Georgia's campus for a vigil for two students who died last week.
Georgia lawmakers gave final approval yesterday to the nearly $38 billion midyear budget.
Parents of kids under 16 would have to give their kids permissions to access certain social media accounts, under a bill passed by the state Senate Monday.
Georgia is in the minority among U.S. states in not having a centralized, statewide plan for addressing homelessness.
Nonprofits in Georgia are expanding to provide more people with disabilities access to medical equipment and assistive technology.
The state House is backing a measure to criminalize the use of "deepfakes" generated by artificial intelligence to impersonate candidates in political campaign ads.
Bipartisan legislation introduced this week proposes changes to some, but not all, current policy that limits the construction or expansion of health care facilities in Georgia, also known as Certificate of Need.
The state House has passed a bill to prevent officers from having to arrest people who refuse to sign traffic tickets.
Researchers from Augusta University are using Census data to find out how many adults in the U.S. are currently living with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Federal prosecutors are weathering another delay in their case against a former Savannah car salesman charged in connection with the January 6th insurrection.
Attorneys suing a Georgia county over zoning changes that they say threaten the Gullah-Geechee community on Sapelo Island asked a judge Tuesday to let them correct technical problems with their civil complaint to avoid having it dismissed.
Atlanta City Council members have approved a measure to ban right turns on red in parts of the city in a 10 to 3 vote.