Youth Villages is adding new educational, wellness and administrative buildings to its Inner Harbor campus. The project also adds five cottages with 28 beds for young people needing inpatient therapeutic services.
More than a thousand people filled a Methodist church in Macon Sunday to show their support for the city’s Jewish community in the wake of a neo-Nazi rally, held less than two weeks ago in front of the city’s Temple Beth Israel.
If you see kids with lemonade stands offering cool drinks on these hot Georgia days, you can thank two Atlanta siblings.
The National Weather Service has issued a heat advisory for portions of Georgia Monday, as Georgians flock to the state’s waterways to celebrate the Fourth of July holiday.
Georgians from Bibb County and across the state packed a downtown Macon sanctuary on a sweltering Sunday afternoon to express support and solidarity for Temple Beth Israel and the wider Jewish community.
In the final episode of Political Rewind,The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's editor-at-large Kevin Riley interviews host Bill Nigut on a lifelong career in journalism, the stories he looks back on, and what he expects in Georgia's political future.
The dome of heat which broke all time records over Texas for much of the week may likely do the same in Georgia beginning this weekend.
Four Georgia families filed a lawsuit Thursday asking a federal court to bar the enforcement of Georgia's new law banning gender-affirming health care.
Christine King Farris, the sister of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has died.
Georgia will roll out its Pathways to Coverage plan starting Saturday.
The Georgia Recovers campaign tells the stories of people in recovery from opioid addiction. It includes a statewide billboard and social media campaign.
Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens and artist Gordon Huether joined families of the victims in the Atlanta Child Murders Tuesday morning to unveil a new memorial honoring the children’s lives.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Monday issued a disaster declaration for 18 Georgia counties after an unexpected March freeze decimated the state's peach crop.
Another U.S. Supreme Court decision makes it likely Georgia will have to redraw its Congressional map to avoid violating the U.S. Civil Rights Act.