On the May 14 edition: Georgia Democrats say kids may go hungry because of proposed SNAP cuts; crime drops in Atlanta; Trump's tariffs change how a Georgia toy retailer stocks her shelves.
Georgia-Pacific is closing its mill in Southwest Georgia's Early County; Sen. Ossoff launches probe into corporate ownership of homes; former Georgia Labor Commissioner Michael Thurmond travels Georgia on a listening tour.
U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff gave updates on an investigation into corporate home ownership rates across Georgia — a practice experts say has made it harder for individuals to buy affordable housing.
Last summer, as political debate swirled over the future of Georgia’s experiment with Medicaid work requirements, Gov. Brian Kemp held a press conference to unveil a three-minute testimonial video featuring a mechanic who works on classic cars.
When the state of Georgia handed Deloitte Consulting a $10.7 million marketing contract last July to promote the nation’s only Medicaid work requirement program, the initiative was in need of serious PR.
Court of Appeals weighs major Georgia voter registration challenge; the state Supreme Court considers public housing accountability case; Atlanta PD reports crime drop
Traffic charges dismissed for 19-year-old in ICE custody; Georgia Supreme Court heard public housing authority case; U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta heard case of mass voter challenge in 2021.
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals is deciding whether to uphold a lower court ruling that found a conservative voting organization did not violate the voting rights act when it challenged over 360,000 Georgia voter registrations in 2021.
On the May 13 edition: A Georgia college student remains in ICE custody; Morehouse announces its next president; a judge hears arguments over a 2021 mass voter challenge.