Georgia
BREAKING: Three-Star Offensive Lineman Kevin Peay Commits to Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech is red hot on the recruiting trail. After getting three commitments earlier in the day, Georgia Tech added a 4th tonight with the commitment of three-star offensive lineman Kevin Peay. Peay is the Yellow Jackets third offensive line commit for the 2025 class, joining four-star Justin Hasenhuetl and three-star Jimmy Bryson.
— 𝐊𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐧 𝐏𝐞𝐚𝐲 𝐉𝐫 (@keviinpeay) June 9, 2024
Peay plays at Lancaster High School in South Carolina and becomes the 10th commitment in the Yellow Jackets 2025 class. Peay is a three-star prospect on 247Sports, ranking as the No. 107 IOL in the country and No. 22 prospect in the state of South Carolina.
Peay is a powerful offensive lineman that is quick at getting to the second level and his ability to do that pops up when you watch him on film. He holds other offers from Pitt, Purdue, App State, Boston College, Cincinnati, Duke, Georgia Southern, Liberty, Marshall, Memphis, Missouri, USF, and Virginia Tech. According to 247Sports, Peay still has official visits lined up to Purdue and Pittsburgh. This was a solid get for Georgia Tech and with a few years of development, he could be a starter.
Georgia Tech’s 2025 class is starting to come together. Just today, they landed safety Fenix Felton, three-star athlete Jamauri Brice, and three-star tight end Connor Roush. Brent Key and his staff are working on filling out his class for the upcoming season and move it up in the ACC Recruiting rankings. The Yellow Jackets had a nice class last season and closed strong. It seems like they are on the right track to be able to assmeble another strong class with developmental players.
2025 Georgia Tech commitments
Four-Star Offensive Lineman Justin Hasenhuetl
Three-Star defensive end Andre Fuller
Three-star quarterback Grady Adamson
Three-star offensive lineman Jimmy Bryson
Three-star Safety Rasean Dinkins
Three-star Running Back JP Powell
Safety Fenix Felton
Three-Star Athlete Jamauri Brice
Three-Star Tight end Connor Roush
Georgia
Georgia House Special Runoff Election 2026 Live Results
The expected vote is the total number of votes that are expected in a given race once all votes are counted. This number is an estimate and is based on several different factors, including information on the number of votes cast early as well as information provided to our vote reporters on Election Day from county election officials. The figure can change as NBC News gathers new information.
Source: Vote data via the Associated Press. Projections by the NBC News Decision Desk.
Georgia
New Safe Haven Law: Georgia ‘baby box’ bill heads to Gov. Kemp
Georgia passes anonymous ‘baby box’ bill
Georgia lawmakers have approved House Bill 350, a life-saving measure allowing anonymous infant surrender through secure, monitored safety boxes at fire and police stations.
ATLANTA – A new bill headed to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk aims to provide Georgians with a safe way to surrender an infant through the installation of “baby safe haven boxes.” The legislation, which passed both the House and Senate last week, serves as an extension of Georgia’s current Safe Haven law.
What we know:
Under existing state law, a mother can surrender a child up to 30 days after birth at a fire department, police station, or hospital without facing prosecution. The new bill would expand these options by allowing for the installation of medical-grade safety boxes at these locations.
The boxes are designed to be installed on the exterior of hospitals, fire stations, or police stations. According to the legislation, these units will be equipped with security cameras to record anyone accessing the box. Once a child is placed inside, an automated system will trigger a 911 call to alert emergency responders. The infant is then transported to a hospital before being placed into the custody of the Department of Family and Children Services.
Local governments will not be responsible for the cost of the units. Instead, individual communities must fundraise if they wish to install a safety box in their area.
What they’re saying:
Advocates like Brittany Almon, who worked with legislators to support the bill, say the mission is deeply personal. Almon became an adoptive mother in 2022 to a boy who was surrendered under the state’s current Safe Haven Law.
“In 2022, I became an adoptive mom to a little boy who was surrendered under our current safe haven law. His biological mother did a face-to-face surrender,” Almon said. “He was a healthy baby boy and whatever her circumstances were, she knew that she couldn’t give him the life he deserved, and she knew there was somebody out there that could.”
Almon explained that the boxes provide a specialized environment for the infant while offering support to the parent.
“Inside the box, there’s a medical-grade bassinet that she will place her baby in. There’s actually also some resources that will fall out to her in an orange bag,” Almon said. “Once that door is shut, there’s a 30-second delay let her, the person, walk away. And from there, an alarm goes off, and that alarm will alert fire station or hospital staff that a newborn is in the box.”
Once the alarm sounds and the child is recovered, Almon noted that “then from there that baby is placed into the Department of Family and Children Services’ custody.”
While the use of surrender boxes has sparked debate, Almon argued that increasing available options is the priority.
“The more resources offer someone, the better it can be to help someone navigate the situation they’re in,” Almon said. “We can always judge people for what they do, and why do it, because we don’t know their circumstances.”
You can read more about Almon’s efforts here.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from the text of the Georgia legislation, an interview with advocate Brittany Almon, and official records from the Georgia General Assembly.
Georgia
Falcons address biggest hole with Georgia prospect in new mock draft
For a long time it seemed the Atlanta Falcons were purposefully avoiding drafting prospects from Georgia for some reason. There are signs that’s changing with the new front office regime, though. Last month Kirby Smart commented on how his program is developing a relationship with the Falcons.
That’s a good sign for Atlanta’s defensive front-seven, because that group needs all the help they can get and it’s where the Bulldogs have thrived the most in recent years. Jalon Walker is helping to reinvigorate their pass rush, and more help could be on the way soon.
In a new five-round mock draft from NFL.com, the Falcons hit up that local resource again and take Georgia defensive tackle Christen Miller at No. 48 overall.
At the combine Miller checked in at 6-foot-4, 321 pounds with 33″ arms and 10″ hands. Here’s the highlight reel.
Like most nose tackle prospects, Miller’s college production (four sacks, 11.5 TFL) doesn’t exactly jump off the page.
However, the scouting report on Miller mentions both upper and lower body power in addition to good balance. Those traits should make him a solid nose tackle at the next level.
If the Falcons do end up drafting Miller, he should project to be starting up front in Week 1.
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