Atlanta, GA
Atlanta City Council to consider resolution to shorten e-scooter curfew for second time
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Nearly five years after adopting an e-scooter curfew after a series of traffic fatalities, the Atlanta City Council will consider a resolution to address whether to shorten the curfew for the second time in two years.
“We want you to be connected, we want you to be in a walkable city, but we’re preventing you from using some of the tools that are eligible for you at night,” said District 12 City Councilman Antonio Lewis, who sponsored the resolution.
The change would shorten the curfew to two hours, 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. It’s currently from midnight to 4 a.m.
For most people, e-scooters from companies like Byrd and Lime are practical means of transportation.
Raegan Turner and Mackenzie O’Brien often work downtown past midnight as servers.
“It’s cool and convenient because I don’t have a car,” Turner said.
Turner believes the change would promote safer movement.
“I don’t have to walk in the middle of the night — as a girl — which is very unsafe in the city,” she added.
But the curfew was originally a safety protocol, running from 9 p.m. to 4 a.m., after multiple scooter-accident deaths in 2019.
The Atlanta City Council instituted the curfew, but even at the time, there was concern that the problem was not scooters but Atlanta’s streets.
In 2022, a Georgia Tech study found that the scooter curfew was hurting city traffic, which led the city council to shorten the curfew from midnight to 4 a.m.
Now, it could be scaled back again to help workers who get off late at night.
“It would make it a lot more accessible for different modes of public transportation,” O’Brien said.
In the years since the curfew began, Atlanta’s roads have also changed.
“I think sometimes the roads were a little too tight, like, for cartoon characters,” said Sara Tan, operations manager at EStar Rides in South Atlanta. “The infrastructure is preparing for it. So, they’re redoing a lot of our roads now.”
That includes where Turner and O’Brien ate lunch on Memorial Drive SE on Monday afternoon.
“They just did this, like, I wanna say six months ago,” Turner said, pointing out dedicated lanes separating bikes and scooters from car traffic.
It’s work like the construction on Memorial Drive that has Lewis feeling like Atlanta is ready to consider a change.
“There’s no reason for us to be so hard on folks who want to ride a scooter,” he said.
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Atlanta, GA
Atlanta firefighters rescue two children trapped 75 feet inside elevator shaft
Two Atlanta children are safe after a terrifying ordeal at Peachtree Center left them trapped inside an elevator shaft for hours — prompting a complex rope rescue by the Atlanta Fire Rescue Department’s Special Operations team.
Fire officials say they respond to as many as 2,000 elevator entrapment calls each year, but this one was far from routine.
A trip for lunch turns into a scare
What began as a simple afternoon walk to get lunch quickly turned into panic for 13-year-old Johnny Jones and his 11-year-old cousin, Malai Moore.
The elevator they were riding in abruptly stopped between floors inside the Peachtree Center complex — leaving them stuck with no access from the parking deck or any residential level.
“It is actually a blind elevator shaft… they had no way to get to them,” said Battalion Chief Lem Mullins.
With no reachable entry point, firefighters first tried calling the elevator company to reset the system. They couldn’t reach anyone for hours.
A complicated rescue from above
Realizing the children couldn’t be accessed from any floor, Fire Rescue Special Operations crews initiated a vertical rescue from the top of the elevator car. Video from inside the shaft shows firefighters Ross and Captain Moss descending toward the trapped children.
“We had to build a rope system to go in at the top of the car… then send a second rescuer down to put the harness on the kids,” Chief Mullins explained.
The elevator was suspended roughly 75 feet above the bottom of the shaft.
Inside, Johnny and Malai were trying to stay calm — pressing buttons, trying to call for help, and holding onto each other.
“It was scary and I was very terrified because I didn’t know what else would happen,” Malai said.
Johnny admitted two things crossed his mind: “I hope we get out sooner than later… and I hope we don’t die in here.”
“I needed to keep them awake”
Outside the shaft, Johnny’s mother could hear the fear in their voices as she called repeatedly to reassure them help was coming.
“They were hungry, cold, sleepy… I was calling to make sure they stayed awake so when the firefighters came down they would know what was going on,” she said.
After hours inside the stalled elevator, firefighters successfully lifted both children to safety — cold, shaken, but uninjured.
“I said thank God that it is over,” Johnny said once he reached solid ground.
A reunion — and some celebrating
On Friday, the children were reunited with the firefighters who rescued them. Crews surprised Johnny and Malai with gift bags and a special tour of the firetruck used in the rescue.
Fire officials say specialized rope rescues like this are highly technical but something they train for regularly.
“Special training and teamwork made this rescue seem easy,” firefighters told CBS News Atlanta.
As for the kids, they’re grateful, relieved — and maybe rethinking their next ride.
Johnny and Malai say they’ll be taking the stairs for a while.
Atlanta, GA
Kel Mitchell, Renee Montgomery boost Atlanta youth sports in new Nick show
Kel Mitchell (left) and Renee Montgomery (right) help Sporting Club Stockbridge Soccer Academy and coach Damian Thompson during the first episode of Nickelodeon’s “Play It Forward,” shot in metro Atlanta. (Nickelodeon)
Several struggling sports youth groups in metro Atlanta recently received field makeovers courtesy of new feel-good Nickelodeon show “Play It Forward” starring Atlanta Dream part-owner Renee Montgomery and Nickelodeon vet Kel Mitchell.
Each of the six episodes features a different sport such as wheelchair basketball, volleyball and lacrosse. The show, which shot from August through October, debuted Wednesday and will air weekly.
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Renee Montgomery dismantles an aging bleacher at Sporting Club Stockbridge Soccer Academy, which was renovated for a new Nickelodeon show “Play It Forward.“ (Nickelodeon)
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In the new show “Play It Forward,” Kel Mitchell pretends to be a Stockbridge city employee who has to shut down the kids’ soccer field over “toxic dirt.” (Nickelodeon)
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Atlanta, GA
Braves, Raisel Iglesias Reach Agreement to Keep Him in Atlanta
One major concern has been scratched off the list for the Atlanta Braves. They announced Wednesday night that they re-signed closer Raisel Iglesias to a one-year, $16 million contract.
Welcome back, Iggy! pic.twitter.com/hR2WUwQOJP
— Atlanta Braves (@Braves) November 20, 2025
According to MLB insider Francys Romero, Iglesias was offered contracts from the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays. Both were of similar value. Despite having a chance to join either team coming off a World Series appearance, he chose to stay in Atlanta.
Knowing that the Braves opted not to trade him off at the deadline, it likely inclined him to stick with the hometown team, especially if it’s going to be at a similar price.
The salary they freed up from letting other relievers loose was able to go toward keeping him around. They declined the options for Piece Johnson and Tyler Kinely to free up $12.5 million in salary. In theory, they still have room, given their spending goals for the offseason, to go after more upgrades.
Iglesias, 36, joined the Braves midway through the 2022 season and has served as their closer since 2023. In 222 appearances, he has a 2.35 ERA, 97 saves and a 0.94 WHIP.
Part of the 2025 season was rocky for him. He struggled with the longball, especially when using his slider. Midway through the season, he managed to get back on track, even earning the National League Reliever of the Month honor for August.
For the third year in a row, he won the award for August, and it’s the fourth time he’s won the award overall, winning the American League award with the Angels in July 2021.
During his electric month, he had a 0.69 ERA, a 0.62 WHIP, picked up 10 saves, walked zero batters and struck out 13 batters in 13 innings pitched across 12 appearances on the mound. In 45 games from June 9 onward, he had a 1.25 ERA with 21 saves.
Along with the need for bullpen help, starting pitching and a shortstop are at the top of the Braves’ priority list for the offseason. They were willing to pivot from the actual tier of priorities to keep Iglesias, but their targets likely switch back to their main focuses for now.
The Braves aim to be a top-five team in payroll next season, which would require an increase of around $50 million from last season. Iglesias’ return will be a pleasant update for most. It shows a willingness to spend. Now, we wait and see what comes next.
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