Georgia
Judge reinstates work requirement in Georgia Medicaid plan
ATLANTA (AP) — In a victory for Georgia’s Republican governor, a federal decide on Friday reinstated a piece requirement within the state’s plan to increase Medicaid protection to extra low-income residents.
U.S. District Decide Lisa Godbey Wooden mentioned the Biden administration’s choice to revoke approval of the work requirement and a associated Georgia proposal to cost some Medicaid recipients month-to-month premiums was “arbitrary and capricious on quite a few, unbiased grounds.”
She known as the revocation “illegal” and set it apart.
The work requirement was accredited by then-President Donald Trump’s administration, however the U.S. Facilities for Medicare and Medicaid Companies Facilities introduced final 12 months that it was revoking approval of that a part of the plan and the premium requirement. That prompted Georgia officers to sue.
CMS doesn’t touch upon litigation as a matter of coverage, the company mentioned in an e-mail.
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp — who proposed the Medicaid plan at problem — hailed the ruling, saying in a Tweet that his plan would “higher serve Georgians than a one-size-fits all Medicaid enlargement.”
CMS had argued the work requirement may very well be not possible for individuals to satisfy throughout the pandemic, when it was crucial that low-income Georgians have entry to well being protection.
Wooden mentioned the company failed to contemplate or weigh the chance that rescinding approval would “imply much less Medicaid protection in Georgia.”
She additionally mentioned CMS wrongly measured the Georgia plan towards a full Medicaid enlargement and “failed to clarify why it modified its thoughts about the important thing points underlying the approval.”
Republicans had offered Georgia’s plan as a financially accountable various to a full enlargement of Medicaid providers below the Inexpensive Care Act, which dozens of states have already carried out.
The plan sought so as to add an estimated 50,000 poor and uninsured Georgia residents to the Medicaid rolls in its first two years. However to be eligible, new Medicaid recipients must have interaction in a minimal variety of qualifying hours by means of work, job coaching, training, volunteering, or different comparable actions.
Democrats in Georgia say full enlargement would cowl lots of of hundreds of individuals at a a lot decrease price to the state. That’s as a result of the ACA, President Barack Obama’s signature well being care regulation, gave states the choice of increasing Medicaid to low-income adults who make as much as 138% of the federal poverty stage, with the federal authorities selecting up 90% of the fee. Greater than 10 million individuals within the U.S. have gained protection that manner.
Kemp has mentioned full enlargement would price the state an excessive amount of cash in the long term.
___
This story has been corrected to mirror that CMS introduced it was revoking approval of the work and premium necessities final 12 months, not final month.
Copyright 2022 The Related Press. All rights reserved.
Georgia
Georgia 400 tolls: Express lanes proposed for busy state highway
ATLANTA – Tolls could make a comeback to Georgia 400. The Georgia Department of Transportation took a step closer to making toll lanes a reality on one of the busiest highways in metro Atlanta. The agency is looking at proposals to build the express lanes. GDOT says this will help ease congestion.
The agency is considering proposals from potential contractors to build the toll lanes. Under the proposal, which is still in the early stages, GDOT would build two new express lanes in each direction on a 16-mile stretch. These lanes would extend from the North Springs MARTA station at Exit 5C in Fulton County to McGinnis Ferry Road in Forsyth County, and one lane in each direction from McGinnis Ferry Road to McFarland Parkway at Exit 12.
“The path forward for managing congestion within metro-Atlanta is the express-lane system,” said GDOT spokesperson Natalie Dale.
Drivers could still travel on GA-400 for free, but would have to pay to ride in the express lanes. “They would similarly to how the other express lanes work,” Dale said. “The more people who choose to use it, the more the price would increase for the use in that corridor.”
GDOT says a private-sector partner would construct, finance, operate and maintain the express lanes. GDOT has not placed a final price tag on the project. But it would cost “in the billions,” Dale said.
Tom Smith, an economist and finance professor at Emory University Goizueta Business School, says tolls pay for things like highway maintenance and construction. “It can drive up direct revenue, revenue that can be used directly for the roads, for road reconstruction,” Smith said. “Toll roads definitely do generate revenue.”
Paying extra could frustrate some motorists. “People don’t like paying tolls. As a consumer who drives those roads, I would be annoyed. But I understand the need to have generating elements and a tax is an easy way to do that,” Smith said.
Drivers who spoke with FOX 5 are split over the possibility of tolls making a comeback along GA-400. It grinds Kimberly Mitchell’s gears. “I’m kind of against it,” Mitchell said. “It’s just one more expense that we have to pay, and people can’t afford it.”
Anika Corpuz says tolls ride fine with her if they remain optional. “I’m okay with it,” Corpuz said. “It doesn’t really bother me. If you can choose to take it or not take it, it’s not going to bother me.”
GDOT tried to build toll lanes three years ago. That got delayed when the proposal came in at $1.7 billion. The agency says it would like to pick a contractor by the fall and start construction by the end of 2025.
Georgia
Why Georgia’s ruling party is pushing for the foreign agent law—and how the West should respond
On May 14, the Georgian parliament passed a controversial “foreign agent” law during its third and final hearing. The legislation would require organizations receiving more than 20 percent of their funding from other countries to register as “organizations serving the interests of a foreign power.” The bill has prompted fierce backlash from critics who argue that it is intended to crack down on opposition to the ruling party and align Georgia closer to Russia and away from the West. President Salome Zurabishvili plans on vetoing the bill, but the parliament can override her veto. Large, ongoing protests in Tbilisi have revealed how unpopular this foreign agent legislation is. So, why is the ruling Georgian Dream party still pushing it forward? And how should the West respond if the bill passes into law?
Electoral advantage
Georgian Dream stands to benefit from the adoption of the foreign agent law ahead of parliamentary elections in October. Civil society in Georgia has historically exerted a significant influence on the country’s politics. For example, it played a pivotal role in the 2012 elections by contributing to voter education and election monitoring.
However, the main vulnerability that Georgian nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and civil society organizations face is financial reliance on international donors. Civil society organizations in Georgia receive more than 90 percent of funding from foreign sources, according to a 2020 report. Targeting their funding streams right before the elections seems to be a logical step for a ruling party that intends to eliminate influential and potentially opposing voices before the elections.
But many argue that Georgian Dream could win the October parliamentary elections without this legislation. After all, the ruling party is ahead in the polls and there have been reports that Georgian Dream has been leveraging administrative power to influence the elections. Extreme divisions have made it almost impossible for the Georgian opposition parties to form a coalition that could counter Georgian Dream. If anything, by introducing the foreign agent bill, Georgian Dream has united the opposition as well as the broader population in defense of Georgia’s European future.
Why, then, did Georgian Dream decide to move forward with this unpopular bill, knowing all too well it would trigger protests and antigovernment narratives just a few months before the elections?
Ivanishvili’s influence
Bidzina Ivanishvili, the richest man in Georgia and the founder and honorary chairman of Georgian Dream, could be key to understanding why the party took this self-destructive step. He exerts exceptional influence on the government’s decisions and actions.
Ivanishvili delivered a speech on April 29, during which he defined NGOs as agents nurtured by a global force that, in his telling, is responsible for getting Georgia and Ukraine into wars with Russia. He believes that the introduction of the foreign agent law ahead of the elections was necessary because NGOs were trying to change electoral laws, acting in the interest of the “global party of war,” which, he believes, intends to engineer a revolution in Georgia.
The combination of Ivanishvili’s views and a ruling party that executes his every decision with no questions asked is putting the Georgian people’s safety and future at risk. A sensible and nuanced Western response is needed to support the Georgian people.
The regional trend
The adoption of the Russian-style foreign agent law seems to be a regional trend, not just a Georgian phenomenon. Hungary, Kyrgyzstan, and Georgia all started actively pushing for foreign agent laws in 2023. Hungary implemented foreign agent legislation in December 2023, and Kyrgyzstan adopted its own in April 2024.
Three states in Eastern Europe and Eurasia pushing to adopt Russian-style foreign agent laws almost at the same time might not be a coincidence. It is possible Russia is inspiring or even pressuring the ruling parties. After all, Moscow’s influence in these countries would likely increase if the NGOs and civil society organizations in these countries were to lose funding from international donors.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has defended Georgian Dream’s reintroduction of the foreign agent law and stated that it is in Moscow’s interests that the situation in Georgia is “stable and predictable.” Russian President Vladimir Putin has also reaffirmed ties with Hungary’s nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and claimed that Russian-Kyrgyz relations are developing in all directions.
The European Union (EU) has already launched legal action against Hungary in response to the introduction of this law. But Georgia and Kyrgyzstan are not EU member states, and so the same legal route is not available.
What the West should and should not do
It is crucial for the international community—especially the EU, the United States, and the United Kingdom—to support the will of the Georgian people. This means aiding Georgia’s pro-European president in her challenge to the ruling party’s actions. It also means seeking accountability for the ruling class that defies the will of its people and is impeding Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic integration, a goal that is written into Georgia’s constitution.
The EU should reconsider measures that could harm the Georgian population, such as the potential suspension of current visa-free travel. It would not help the situation to punish the wider Georgian population for the ruling party’s actions.
The international community and donors must continue their support for civil society organizations in Georgia, especially in the lead-up to the October elections. Despite the legal ramifications of the new bill and the anticipated crackdown on the civil society sector, sustaining funding streams is crucial for bolstering civil society’s monitoring capacity. This is vital for ensuring transparent and fair electoral processes in October and providing Georgia with an opportunity for another peaceful transition of power.
The many EU and Georgian flags carried through the streets of Tbilisi in recent weeks make clear where most Georgians’ view their future. The West must do what it can to help keep them headed in that direction.
Maia Nikoladze is the assistant director at the Economic Statecraft Initiative within the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. Follow her at @Mai_Nikoladze.
Ana Lejava is a policy associate at the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security and a former Young Ambassador of Georgia to the United States. Follow her at @AnaLejava.
Further reading
Mon, Apr 19, 2021
Fighting for the hearts and minds of Sakartvelo: The Georgian information environment during the 2020 parliamentary election
Report
By
Eto Buziashvili, Givi Gigitashvili, Sopo Gelava, Graham Brookie, Andy Carvin, Iain Robertson, Zarine Kharazian
A technical analysis of how various online actors, both foreign and domestic, attempted to manipulate public opinion and influence the recent Georgian parliamentary election results.
Georgia
Georgia softball live score updates in first round NCAA Regional vs. UNCW
Georgia softball will begin its run in the 2024 NCAA Tournament as the No. 11 seed against UNCW on Friday in the Athens Regional.
The game is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+ following the first game of the day between Liberty and Charlotte at Jack Turner Stadium. This is a double elimination tournament, with the winner advancing to the Super Regionals against the winner of the Los Angeles Regional, which houses national No. 6 seed UCLA, Grand Canyon, San Diego State and Virginia Tech.
This is the second time Georgia has hosted back-to-back regionals, dating back to the triple host gig they had between 2014-2016. It is the 23rd straight NCAA Tournament made by Georgia, not including the canceled 2020 season. Georgia had advanced to last year’s super-regional rounds. The Bulldogs have advanced to the Women’s College World Series five times, last in 2021, never bringing home the title.
The Bulldogs (39-16) lost to 2-seeded Florida in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals.
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What channel is Georgia vs. UNCW?
TV channel: ESPN+
Livestream: WatchESPN
Georgia softball start time vs. UNCW
Date: Friday, May 17
Time: 5:30 p.m. ET
Location: Jack Turner Stadium; Athens, Ga.
Georgia softball live score updates vs. UNCW
Georgia softball 2024 schedule
Date & Time | Opponent | Location | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Feb. 9 (Red & Black Showcase) @ 3:30 p.m. | Murray State | Athens | W, 11-0 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 9 (Red & Black Showcase) @ 6 p.m. | South Dakota | Athens | W, 4-0 |
Feb. 10 (Red & Black Showcase) @ 1 p.m. | Murray State | Athens | W, 2-0 |
Feb. 10 (Red & Black Showcase) @ 3:30 p.m. | Purdue | Athens | W, 6-1 |
Feb. 11 (Red & Black Showcase) @ Noon | Purdue | Athens | W, 5-1 |
Feb. 15 (Shriners Children’s Clearwater Inv.) @ 1 p.m. | Wisconsin | Clearwater, Fla. | W, 7-6 (10 inn.) |
Feb. 16 (Shriners Children’s Clearwater Inv.) @ 1 p.m. | Oklahoma State | Clearwater, Fla. | W, 7-4 |
Feb. 16 (Shriners Children’s Clearwater Inv.) @ 1 p.m. | UCLA | Clearwater, Fla. | W, 7-2 |
Feb. 17 (Shriners Children’s Clearwater Inv.) @ 1 p.m. | Florida State | Clearwater, Fla. | W, 20-10 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 17 (Shriners Children’s Clearwater Inv.) @ N/A | Minnesota | Clearwater, Fla. | Canceled |
Feb. 23 (Georgia Classic) @ 5:30 p.m. | Virginia Tech | Athens | L, 4-5 |
Feb. 24 (Georgia Classic) @ 12:30 p.m. | Virginia Tech | Athens | W, 7-5 |
Feb. 24 (Georgia Classic) @ 3 p.m. | Radford | Athens | W, 10-1 (6 inn.) |
Feb. 25 (Georgia Classic) @ 1 p.m. | Dartmouth | Athens | W, 8-1 |
Feb. 28 @ 5 p.m. | Clemson | Athens | W, 2-1 (8 inn.) |
March 1 (DeMarini Inv.) @ 3 p.m. | Cal | Palo Alto, Calif. | W, 4-2 |
March 1 (DeMarini Inv.) @ 5:30 p.m. | Boise State | Palo Alto, Calif. | W, 4-1 |
March 2 (DeMarini Inv.) @ 4:30 p.m. | Cal | Palo Alto, Calif. | L, 2-7 |
March 2 (DeMarini Inv.) @ 7 p.m. | Stanford | Palo Alto, Calif. | Canceled |
March 3 (DeMarini Inv.) @ 3 p.m. | Stanford | Palo Alto, Calif. | L, 1-3 (9 inn.) |
March 8 (Bulldog Classic) @ 6 p.m. | Miami (OH) | Athens | W, 13-2 (5 inn.) |
March 9 (Bulldog Classic) @ 1 p.m. | Jacksonville State | Athens | W, 9-0 (5 inn.) |
March 9 (Bulldog Classic) @ 3:30 p.m. | Miami (OH) | Athens | W, 6-4 |
March 10 (Bulldog Classic) @ 1 p.m. | Jacksonville State | Athens | W, 8-6 |
March 10 (Bulldog Classic) @ 3:30 p.m. | Furman | Athens | W, 7-0 |
March 13 @ 6 p.m. | Georgia Tech | Athens | W, 6-3 |
March 15 @ 6 p.m. | Alabama | Athens | W, 4-2 |
March 16 @ Noon | Alabama | Athens | W, 11-3 (5 inn.) |
March 17 @ Noon | Alabama | Athens | L, 4-5 |
March 20 @ 6 p.m. | Georgia Southern | Athens | W, 17-1 (5 inn.) |
March 23 @ 2 p.m. | Ole Miss | Oxford, Miss. | W, 7-0 |
March 23 @ 5 p.m. | Ole Miss | Oxford, Miss. | W, 10-7 (8 inn.) |
March 24 @ 2 p.m. | Ole Miss | Oxford, Miss. | W, 4-1 |
March 27 @ 6:30 p.m. | Kennesaw State | Kennesaw | W, 10-1 (5 inn.) |
March 30 @ Noon | Arkansas | Athens | L, 2-3 |
March 31 @ Noon | Arkansas | Athens | W, 8-2 |
April 1 @ 7 p.m. | Arkansas | Athens | L, 2-8 |
April 3 @ 6 p.m. | Mercer | Athens | W, 8-1 |
April 5 @ 6 p.m. | Tennessee | Knoxville, Tenn. | L, 1-5 |
April 6 @ Noon | Tennessee | Knoxville, Tenn. | W, 3-2 |
April 7 @ 11 a.m. | Tennessee | Knoxville, Tenn. | L, 1-3 |
April 10 @ 6 p.m. | Georgia Southern | Athens | W, 5-0 |
April 12 @ 6:30 p.m. | Kentucky | Lexington, Ky. | L, 5-7 |
April 13 @ 2 p.m. | Kentucky | Lexington, Ky. | W, 6-4 |
April 14 @ 2 p.m. | Kentucky | Lexington, Ky. | L, 2-6 |
April 17 @ 6 p.m. | USC-Upstate | Athens | W, 8-0 |
April 19 @ 6 p.m. | Missouri | Athens | L, 2-4 |
April 20 @ Noon | Missouri | Athens | W, 4-2 |
April 21 @ Noon | Missouri | Athens | W, 4-2 |
April 26 @ 6 p.m. | Florida | Athens | L, 1-9 (5 inn.) |
April 27 @ 11 a.m. | Florida | Athens | W, 11-6 |
April 28 @ Noon | Florida | Athens | L, 7-10 |
May 3 @ 5 p.m. | Mississippi State | Starkville, Miss. | L, 0-2 |
May 4 @ 1 p.m. | Mississippi State | Starkville, Miss. | W, 5-0 |
May 5 @ Noon | Mississippi State | Starkville, Miss. | L, 1-2 |
May 8 (SEC Tournament, round 1) @ 5 p.m. | Auburn | Auburn, Ala. | W, 6-5 |
May 9 (SEC Tournament, round 2) @ 5 p.m. | Florida | Auburn, Ala. | L, 4-9 |
May 17 (NCAA Regionals, round 1) @ 5:30 p.m. | UNCW | Athens | |
May 24-26 (NCAA Super Regionals) | TBA | Campus sites | |
May 30-June 6 (Women’s College World Series) | TBA | Oklahoma City |
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