Augusta, GA
Learn more about downtown businesses with this coloring book
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – Friday is National Coloring Book Day, and it just so happens to coincide with Beautify Augusta selling its 2,000 “Downtown Augusta Coloring Book”.
Organizers with the nonprofit say the goal of the coloring book was to highlight local business owners and the parts of the Garden City that make it unique.
“So, the book is filled with people who have businesses in a downtown space. You’ll find the name of the business owner, what they look like and you’ll how the front of their business looks. The point of that is to help people who are not familiar with downtown to become more familiar with the people who invest in downtown,” said Jeremy Rueggberg with Beautify Augusta.
Thanks to the success of this book, Beautify Augusta is using the money raised to bring another mural to downtown.
Art Reed will be the artist, who has already created several large murals in downtown.
The location of this new mural will be announced next week.
The coloring books are $10. You can find them around a ton of local businesses downtown.
Copyright 2024 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Missing 31-year-old last seen in Augusta on Sunday
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WJBF) – The Richmond County Sheriff’s Office is asking the public for assistance in locating a man who who has not been since Sunday.
Christopher Floyd, 31, was last seen May 3, 2026 on the 3500 block of Melody Drive. He was last seen wearing blue shorts and white t-shirt.
Officials say Floyd is possibly in possession of a 2007 Cadillac Escalade.
Anyone that comes in contact with Christopher Floyd or has any information as to his location is asked to contact RCSO at (706) 821-1080 or (706) 821-1020.
Augusta, GA
Augusta Mayor Candidates: Garnett Johnson
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – Mayor Garnett Johnson is making his case for reelection, pointing to economic growth and new investments as evidence he deserves four more years leading Augusta-Richmond County.
Johnson sat down with WRDW as part of a series featuring all four candidates in the mayoral race.
The incumbent launched his reelection bid with three promises: more economic growth, smarter spending and a government that delivers results.
“Growing our economic opportunities through jobs and investments, growing our population, growing our housing inventory,” Johnson said.
New employers and bipartisan funding
Johnson pointed to new investments including incoming employers like Aurubis and NetJets. He also credited a bipartisan approach to securing funding from both the Biden and Kemp administrations.
“My only fight is Augusta’s fight, so you let the Democrats and Republicans and Independents fight the battles in Atlanta and in Washington,” Johnson said. “My only fight is making sure that we secure the funding to make sure that Augusta continues to grow and to thrive.”
SPLOST 9 and Riverwalk improvements
Johnson discussed SPLOST 9, which he said combines lifestyle options and basic infrastructure. The package includes critical needs for the sheriff’s office, addressing concerns around the safety and condition of the jail.
“Those that are housed in our jail are considered innocent until found guilty,” Johnson said.
The plan also includes reimagining the Riverwalk.
“The Riverwalk is actually our front door and our living room. As people come to visit, the first place they want to see is the Riverwalk,” Johnson said.
The project would also address the boathouse, which is currently abandoned and not open to the public. Johnson said the goal is to open it for wedding anniversaries, wedding receptions, graduation parties and family reunions.
COVID rental assistance issues
Johnson’s tenure has faced challenges, including more than six million dollars in federal COVID rental assistance funds that were not distributed as intended. The money was meant to help Augusta families pay rent and utilities.
Johnson said the accounting issues occurred prior to his administration, but his office uncovered the problems.
“We’re changing that. We’re exposing things that should have been exposed years ago,” Johnson said. “We have the administrator’s office as well as the commission and the mayor’s office that’s working through all of these issues that have been underlying issues that have not been made apparent to the public that we’re now addressing.”
Johnson said he called for federal agencies to investigate to ensure proper transparency and accountability.
“This was a time and an opportunity for us to help a lot of families that were struggling as a result of COVID and a result of losing jobs and wages,” Johnson said. “For more than six million dollars not to be used in that manner is certainly a travesty, and it should never have happened.”
The city anticipates submitting an audit in early May before the June deadline, which will also include the 2025 audit to get the city back in compliance with state grants.
Fiscal responsibility and governance
Johnson said he stands on the side of the taxpayer and has delivered fiscal responsibility in his own department, returning thousands of dollars to the general fund each year.
“What we have to do is we just have to tighten our belts and find out where there’s opportunities to create more efficiencies in our departments and deliver those savings to the taxpayer.”
Johnson said he will not be a mayor that raises taxes or fails to control spending.
On governance structure, Johnson said voters in 2024 gave the mayor an equal vote. He said the current structure requires six votes to get anything done among 10 commissioners, a mayor and a city administrator.
“Someone ultimately has to be in charge to make the day-to-day decisions as it relates to this governance, and I believe that person should be a professional manager,” Johnson said.
Johnson said any charter review process should engage the voters of Augusta-Richmond County to decide their future and how to move the city forward.
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
George Washington slept here: First president visited Augusta in 1791
Video: History of the Signer’s Monument
Interested in learning more about Georgia’s history for America’s 250th anniversary. Look no further than Greene Street and the Signer’s Monument.
George Washington slept here.
At least 17 current or former U.S. presidents have visited Augusta over its long history, beginning with the nation’s first chief executive.
Washington’s Southern Tour from March to June 1791 was punctuated by parades, speeches, and other celebrations in which residents at each stop displayed the utmost hospitality.
And Washington recorded it all – some of it, anyway – in his personal diary.
On May 18, 1791, Washington’s entourage, continuing from Savannah to Augusta, ate breakfast at an inn on the banks of McBean Creek, “15 miles from Waynesborough,” owned by Revolutionary War veteran James Fulcher.
Four miles from Augusta, Georgia’s capital at the time, Washington was greeted by a delegation of dignitaries led by Gov. Edward Telfair and George Walton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
Washington “was escorted into the Town, and received under a discharge of Artillery,” he wrote. A meal and a tea followed at Telfair’s Grove plantation, “with many well dressed Ladies.”
He also wrote about “between 60 and 70 well dressed ladies” at an assembly at the Academy of Richmond County on May 19. On May 20, he was given a tour of ruined British battlements from the Patriots’ recapture of Augusta in 1781.
“The town of Augusta is well laid out with wide and spacious Streets,” Washington wrote in his May 20 diary entry. “It stands on a large area of a perfect plain but it is not yet thickly built tho’ surprisingly so for the time.”
In the decades after Washington’s visit, a rumor persisted that while he was in Augusta, the president buried one of his favorite greyhounds, supposedly named Cornwallis after the defeated British general.
“At some time during those three days, President Washington had the sad duty of burying his favorite greyhound,” longtime Augusta historian Edward Cashin wrote in his 1980 book “The Story of Augusta.”
Longtime Augusta Chronicle columnist pointed out years later that the 1892 newspaper article supposedly documenting the burial was dated April 1 – April Fool’s Day.
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