Georgia
Georgia Gov. Kemp signs 2023 budget, which includes teacher pay raises
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Thursday signed into regulation the state’s 2023 funds.
“Now we have prioritized schooling, public security and healthcare, even after we confronted really unprecedented occasions,” Kemp mentioned.
The funds starting July 1 continues $5,000-a-year pay raises that started in April for state and college staff and turns a $2,000 bonus Okay-12 lecturers are getting this yr right into a pay increase. It additionally continues boosts in Okay-12 formulation spending and supplies sufficient cash to the state’s public universities that they’ve pledged to roll again sure charges added through the Nice Recession, slicing pupil prices.
Greater than $1 billion in new cash is budgeted for schooling subsequent yr in comparison with this yr’s unique funds, a part of a ten.8% total improve in spending.
The plan spends $30.2 billion in state income and $57.9 billion total.
The funds consists of extra funding for applications that assist individuals with disabilities keep away from being despatched to a nursing house. The state usually provides about 100 slots annually to this system, which advocates say has a ready listing round 7,000 individuals. The $10.3 million enhance would finance 513 new slots, which Tillery has mentioned mentioned is the utmost quantity of recent slots that could possibly be created proper now by incapacity help suppliers.
Advert
The state funds requires $180 million extra total on its foremost psychological well being company, the Division of Behavioral Well being and Developmental Disabilities, a part of a broader psychological well being overhaul. Apart from the help for house and group care, there can be a 1% reimbursement enhance for mental and developmental incapacity suppliers, plus greater than $13 million to supply extra raises, past the $5,000 state pay enhance, for nurses and different different staff at state psychiatric hospitals. There’s additionally cash to open new psychiatric beds and $2.2 million to broaden a program of necessary assisted outpatient remedy.
“With this funds, we’re additional making certain that Georgia stays a state that values life in any respect levels by placing over 28 million {dollars} towards extending Medicaid protection of recent moms from six to 12 months following beginning, and growing the supplier fee for foster mother and father, youngster caring establishments, youngster putting companies, and relative caregivers by 10 %,” Kemp mentioned.
Advert
Georgia’s funds pays to coach 1.7 million Okay-12 college students and 435,000 faculty college students, home 45,000 state prisoners, pave 18,000 miles (29,000 kilometers) of highways and look after greater than 200,000 people who find themselves mentally unwell, developmentally disabled or hooked on medication or alcohol.
The funds additionally features a burst of spending on public security, growing salaries for prosecutors and public defenders and spending extra on the state’s crime lab and health worker. A Senate plan to situation a lot of the elevated spending on health workers to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation reopening a lab in Macon was scaled again, however stays at a decrease degree. The funds additionally consists of $579,000 for 4 GBI staff to research election fraud.
There will probably be extra $2,000 pay boosts for guards in prisons and juvenile justice services, extra pay enhance for nurses and others employees at psychological hospitals, plus a further $4 million to spice up guard salaries at personal prisons that maintain Georgia inmates. The state can also be budgeting $10 million on jail expertise applications, together with looking for or jam illicit cellphones.
Advert
Past raises, there’s additionally greater than $100 million to again Kemp’s plan to lift the 401K retirement match for state staff from 3% to 9% and to pay staff for unused depart after they retire.
In increased schooling, $10 million will probably be shifted to fund faculty completion grants for college students near commencement with unmet monetary want. However there will probably be large modifications in one other faculty help program referred to as tuition equalization grants. Now, each Georgia resident who attends a non-public faculty is eligible for $850 a yr. The funds boosts that quantity to $900 a yr for present college students, letting them proceed on the present program.
Copyright 2022 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.
Georgia
School Closings in Northeast Georgia
Due to the forecast of a winter storm with snow and ice, the following schools will be closed on Friday, January 10. Now Habersham will update the list as we receive the official notification from the school administration.
Schools
Tallulah Falls School as well as all extracurricular activities including the basketball games against Georgia Walton which have been postponed.
Colleges
Athens Technical College closed Friday.
If you would like to have your school or daycare added to our list, please email [email protected]
Georgia
Kirby Smart and the Bulldogs Have Entered a New Era of Georgia Football
As the Bulldogs turn their attention to the 2025 college football season, the team will be entering a new era of Georgia football.
The Georgia Bulldogs 2024 college football season ended just over a week ago and the transfer portal entires, draft declarations, and coaching changes that subsequently follow the conclusion of a season have begun taking place. But as the post-mortem era of the Dawgs’ season brings changes throughout the building, Georgia football as a whole is undergoing a change as well.
This year’s senior class at the University of Georgia finished their careers as the winningest class in Bulldog history and were an integral part of the team’s two conference titles and back-to-back national championships that ushered in a new era of dominance that had never been seen by Georgia fans. But with the collegiate careers of the most successful Bulldog class ever now over, the Dawgs’ “renaissance era” of dominance has seemingly reached its conclusion as well.
A handful of the Bulldogs’ starters this season had playing experience in a national championship game. Names such as Malaki Starks, Carson Beck, Tate Ratledge, Mykel Williams, and others provided the team with real-game experience and a cultural understanding of what it took to win a national championship. But with the exception of a few returning seniors such as Oscar Delp and Dillon Bell, virtually none of Georgia’s starters in 2025 will have any experience in national championship games. Subsequently, the first-hand “championship experience” that is often required to win a national title within the roster has greatly been diminished.
As alarming as this news may be for Bulldog fans, it is certainly not the end of the world. After all, the Dawgs’ 2024 roster showcased numerous flashes of championship culture throughout the season. Flashes such as the team’s overtime win over Texas in the SEC Championship and an eight-overtime thriller against Georgia Tech at home prove that future rosters are more than capable of rebuilding the culture and habits that it takes to win the final game of the season.
The Georgia Bulldogs’ 2021 and 2022 rosters provided an incredible foundation for following teams to compete for national titles. But as members of those teams depart, conferences realign, and the College Football Playoff format changes, it is time to turn the page on Georgia’s “renaissance era” of dominance and usher in a new era of Georgia Football. An era that provides the team with a new championship culture and experiences that provide succeeding teams with the ability to continue the incredible legacy of the Georgia Bulldogs.
Other Georgia News:
Join the Community:
Subscribe to our YouTube Page HERE.
You can follow us for future coverage by clicking “Follow” on the top right-hand corner of the page. Also, be sure to like us on Facebook @BulldogMaven & follow us on Twitter at@DawgsDaily
Georgia
Kemp unveils plan to to spend millions intended to restore order in Georgia prisons • Georgia Recorder
The Georgia Department of Corrections and Republican Gov. Brian Kemp unveiled a plan Tuesday to spend an additional $600 million on the state prison system, which has suffered from inadequate staffing, violence, and facilities in disrepair.
During a joint meeting of House and Senate appropriation subcommittees Tuesday, state corrections department Commissioner Tyrone Oliver presented the wide ranging list of budget recommendations, describing them as necessary investments for strengthening prison security, increasing staffing levels, increasing compensation for correctional officers and other staff and renovating facilities. The conditions of Georgia’s prisons were so poor that the United States Department of Justice threatened a lawsuit if the state did not shore up a myriad of problems it found to violate the constitutional rights of inmates.
The federal report contains descriptions of numerous assaults, including beatings, stabbings, rapes and acts of torture. It finds that the homicide rate in Georgia prisons is nearly triple that of the national average, and that other serious and life-threatening incidents are “exponentially more frequent.”
According to Oliver, the additional money is needed to address the near-term challenges of the prisons, which often leave staff and inmates in dangerous situations.
“Staffing levels for correctional officers are low all around this, all around the country and also at the federal level,” Oliver said. “This leads to insufficient staffing patterns and existing staff do not feel safe. Staffing patterns and training needs need to be updated to meet the needs of the modern workforce.”
The corrections department is requesting an additional $6.1 million for the current budget in order to begin the process of hiring an additional 882 correctional and security officers over the next several years. In order to reduce the current staff-to-offender ratio of 14 to 11, the corrections department aims to add 330 correctional and security officer positions over the next year.
The department is also requesting several million dollars for a 4% salary increase for correctional officers and staff working in education, chaplain, food service and maintenance. The governor’s recommendations also call for an 8% salary hike for behavioral health counselors, which would put them close in line with statewide averages in surrounding states.
The department is also pushing for potential officer promotions every six months that will provide better pay as a way to retain staff.
Several legislators on Tuesday’s panels addressed the department’s plans to significantly increase staffing over the next several years, referencing the current hiring and retention challenges that have resulted in a system-wide deficit of about 2,600 personnel.
“While adding new positions sounds great, and we should strive for that, we’re having a devil of a time trying to get there to begin with in our current ones,” said Sen. John Albers, a Roswell Republican.
Kemp said the corrections budget proposal is the latest in a series of significant spending on public safety designed to reduce crime by targeting violent offenders and improving training and compensation for law enforcement officers.
The budget recommendations included input from independent consulting firm Guidehouse Inc., appointed by Kemp in June to create an in-depth assessment of a Georgia prison system that houses about 50,000 inmates and employs about 9,000 people.
“Public safety is the number one priority of the state government, and that is why we have taken a comprehensive and deliberate approach to strengthening law enforcement and improving our corrections system,” Kemp said in a statement Tuesday.
The governor’s budget proposal also includes money addressing inmate overcrowding in state prisons. Kemp’s recommendations include spending $40 million to design and plan a new prison facility, adding 446 beds to an existing private prison contract, and adding 126 bed units to ease inmate movement while capital and security improvements are underway.
The corrections department is also requesting an extra $50 million to install new contraband interdiction technology, including equipment to detect cell phones and drones, which prison officials say is the most common method of smuggling drugs and weapons into prisons.
Another $77 million would be used to replace locks inside the facilities as well as perform other major infrastructure improvements. The corrections department is also recommending spending an additional $86 million for emergency repairs and maintenance at facilities.
The $600 million budget plan will be split between this year’s budget and the budget for next year, which will both be voted on by the Legislature this spring.
The Georgia corrections department has labeled the Justice Department’s accusations as a misunderstanding of the systemic challenges of operating expansive prison systems, and also criticized the federal department for its poor record of overseeing federal prisons.
Dublin Republican Rep. Matt Hatchett said holding a state department’s budget subcommittee meeting the week prior to the start of the Legislative session is a sign of pressing needs to address within the state corrections department.
“It is out of the ordinary, and I think it shows the emphasis that (Kemp) and us collectively are putting on this issue,” said Hatchett, chairman of the House Special Subcommittee of Appropriations on State Prisons, “I do appreciate him agreeing to do that. You can study things for a long time and hope that you get the right answer and the right path forward. Well, this has been studied and studied, and I think it’s time to get something done.”
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
-
Business1 week ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Culture1 week ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports1 week ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics6 days ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics6 days ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics4 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health3 days ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World1 week ago
Ivory Coast says French troops to leave country after decades