Georgia
Where is Trump today? See Wednesday schedule, latest news as he campaigns in Georgia
Donald Trump talks economy, immigration with Florida Hispanic voters
Donald Trump sat down during a roundtable event and spoke about the economy and immigration with Hispanic voters.
Former President Donald Trump is headed to Georgia Wednesday after spending most of the last two days in another battleground state, North Carolina.
Wednesday afternoon he is set to hold a “Believers and Ballots Faith Town Hall” with Georgia Lt. Governor Burt Jones before appearing at a rally in Duluth, Georgia that evening. The rally is being hosted by Turning Point with founder Charlie Kirk and former Hawaii Democrat Tulsi Gabbard.
Recent polls show Trump in an incredibly tight race with Vice President Kamala Harris nationally. Harris stepped off the trail to tape interviews with NBC News and Telemundo on Tuesday.
Election 2024 live updates: Trump, Harris polls with 2 weeks until Election Day
Yesterdays’ news: Trump confirms Joe Rogan interview, cancels RFK Jr. town hall
Trump bopped to Doral, Florida Tuesday for a roundtable with Hispanic voters.
He mocked Harris for staying off the campaign trail but canceled a town hall previously scheduled for Tuesday afternoon with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., citing scheduling changes.
News broke Tuesday that Trump is also scheduled to sit for an interview Friday with one of the most prominent figures on the podcasting scene, Joe Rogan. He has spoken with a number of noteworthy internet personalities with largely male audiences, including Theo Von and Adin Ross.
After his viral appearance at the Pennsylvania McDonald’s drive-through Sunday, Trump has begun selling t-shirts with a photo that captures the moment.
Trump also spoke at a rally Tuesday night in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Contributing: David Jackson, Phillip Bailey, Francesca Chambers
Kinsey Crowley is a trending news reporter at USA TODAY. Reach her at kcrowley@gannett.com, and follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley.
Georgia
Georgia baseball will resume NCAA Regional game with LIU Saturday morning
Georgia baseball will resume its NCAA Athens Regional game with Long Island at 9 a.m. on Saturday, May 29, after persistent rain—heavy at times—forced the suspension of the game.
The Bulldogs have a commanding 15-1 lead with nobody out in the bottom of the sixth.
The teams and some fans waited out a delay that started 7:14 p.m.
The game was suspended officially at 9:06 p.m. Long Island players were already grabbing their equipment in the dugout to depart for the team hotel before then.
The winner of Georgia-LIU will play No. 3 seed Liberty Saturday in the double-elimination tournament in a game scheduled for 5 p.m.
The loser will play No. 2 seed Boston College at noon.
The No. 3 national seed Bulldogs hit six homers before the game was delayed due to heavy rain.
There was a 53 percent chance of rain at 9 a.m. Saturday, according to weather.com, decreasing to 17 percent at 11 a.m., but there’s a threat of storms in the afternoon.
Georgia
Georgia Power customers to see modest savings under new rate plan approved by PSC
The Georgia Public Service Commission this week approved a plan expected to reduce utility bills for Georgia Power customers by a few dollars a month.
The commission said the change will generate about $285 million in total annual savings for Georgia Power customers, or roughly $50 per year — about $4.04 per month — for the average residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours a month.
The Georgia PSC voted Thursday to lower overall rates as part of the approved plan.
Georgia Power Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Tyler Cook said the decision will provide “real savings for Georgia families and businesses as the heat of summer begins and energy use increases.”
“At Georgia Power, our teams work every day to run our business efficiently and keep reliable and affordable energy flowing to our customers,” Cook said.
Cook said the outcome followed months of work between Georgia Power and PSC staff, including reviews, public hearings and input from residents and intervenors.
The approved plan is tied to a stipulated agreement reached earlier this month involving two cases filed with the PSC in February, the Fuel Cost Recovery case and the Storm Cost Recovery case. Those cases addressed recovering fuel costs used to generate electricity and expenses tied to restoring power after storms.
Georgia Power said its rates remain, on average, about 15% below the national average and that it is still on track to provide additional annual savings of about $102 per year for typical residential customers beginning in 2029.
Georgia
Georgia PSC votes to lower Georgia Power utility rates
ATLANTA – The Georgia Public Service Commission approved a stipulated agreement on Thursday to lower utility rates for Georgia Power customers starting June 1.
The regulatory body voted to pass the deal without changes, establishing how the utility can bill for fuel costs and storm damage restoration expenses.
State regulators approve rate cuts
What we know:
The Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) voted 3-2 to reject several utility cost amendments before ultimately passing the overall deal. Under the approved agreement, a typical residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours per month will see monthly bills decrease by roughly $4.03 to $4.04. Total annual savings across all 2.8 million Georgia Power customers are projected to reach approximately $285 million.
The deal reduces how much money the utility can recover from its customer base for storm expenses by nearly 60%, dropping the revenue requirement from $270 million down to $109 million. The agreement also extends the amortization of storm recovery costs, largely tied to Hurricane Helene in 2024, to 67 months, caps natural gas advance purchases at 20% over a 36-month window, and cuts $13 million from the company’s original fuel recovery estimates.
Accountability questions remain unresolved
What we don’t know:
While the PSC agreed to launch a separate investigation into how fuel costs are allocated, officials have not yet confirmed how much large industrial operations will be forced to pay in future rate cases. Consumer advocacy groups argue that massive data center companies are driving up fuel costs for everyday ratepayers without paying for the infrastructure upgrades they require. Critics note that it remains unclear if a future utility asset structure will successfully shift financial burdens away from residential homes.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from official press releases issued by the Georgia Public Service Commission and Georgia Power, as well as previous FOX 5 Atlanta reporting.
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