Monday onPolitical Rewind: DeKalb Co. DA Sherry Boston announced she's withdrawing her office from criminal cases against "Cop City" protestors, citing prosecutorial differences with the Attorney General's office. Plus, the Department of Justice turns their attention to states' false electors.
Friday on Political Rewind: A Cobb County elementary school teacher may be the first casualty of Georgia’s new “divisive concepts” ban. Meanwhile, a state investigation confirms the two election officials at the heart of the “suitcase of ballots” conspiracy theory did nothing wrong.
One of the five people who died in the undersea tour of the Titanic, French mariner Paul-Henry Nargeolet, has ties to Georgia.
Researchers at Georgia State University will study the effects of remote learning during the pandemic on the state’s K – 12 students with the help of a nearly $2 million grant.
Ambulances in Valdosta are now equipped with technology that controls traffic signals.
Thursday on Political Rewind:Host Bill Nigut continues our series of conversations with Georgia’s thought leaders. He interviews former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, Atlanta’s first female mayor and the first Black woman to head a major Southern city.
The National Park Service warns that “recent storms and continued sea-level rise have exacerbated the physical decline of some important park facilities.”
The Georgia Supreme Court has set out a legal framework for deciding when a resident of an extended stay motel should be afforded the full rights of a renter.
The city of Atlanta approved a referendum petition Wednesday from opponents of Atlanta's proposed police training center also known as "Cop City."
The National Park Service is asking for public input on how to help Savannah's Fort Pulaski National Monument adjust to rising sea levels.
In 2022, Georgia passed the Mental Health Parity Act. It authorizes studies of how the state could and should pay for more of this critical mental care.
Wednesday on Political Rewind: Opponents of Atlanta's police training center filed a lawsuit against the city clerk after their referendum petition was denied twice, delaying a time-sensitive process. The Atlanta Advisory Board endorsed the referendum. And we discuss the latest on the Supreme Court's docket.